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Print Reviews

‘F1: The Movie’ guns the engine where it counts. Most won’t notice how goofy it is because…it’s fun as hell to watch.

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Misshapen, inert, and incomplete, ’28 Years Later’ feels like the bad first episode of a bigger story that’s only just getting started here.

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Director Dean DeBlois has delivered what might be the best live-action remake yet, proving that a strong story doesn’t need to be reinvented. The film features a committed cast, including a physical Gerard Butler as Stoick, and stunning visuals that bring the world of Hiccup and Toothless to life.

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[Minor Rock Fist Up] From the title, it’s obvious this franchises can’t let go of the boogeyman. Len Wiseman’s Ballerina spins a mostly unnecessary groove into that tight narrative alley between John Wick: Chapter 3 – Parabellum and Chapter 4, and it does so with all the subtlety of a grenade launcher. The film plants […]

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An action-forward shoot-em-up with just enough bullets, blades, and grenades to keep things interesting for 2 hours, this spin-off is good, not great.

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A 97-minute love-letter to obstinance, tunnel vision, and indignant narcissism, ‘Friendship’ is the movie 2025 deserves, and is hilarious to boot.

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Chosen family under one big roof!

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A road-trip comedy, ‘Sacramento’ tries to answers questions about fatherhood and friendship but falls short in the end.

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Fans will love it. Non fans will be confused. And gamers will wanna game.

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‘The Luckiest Man in America’ feels like a missed opportunity, and a tease of a better movie hiding somewhere in the margins of this one.

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An odd couple dramedy with a strong thematic backbone rooted in explorations of grief and acceptance, ‘The Friend’ creeps up on you.

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‘Death of a Unicorn’ is fun, interesting, and good (enough), though shoddy CGI work and a somewhat flat performance from Paul Rudd keep it from realizing its full potential.

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Snow White and the Seven Ugliest Things

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‘Novocaine’ is fast and at times funny, thanks to a solid performance from Jack Quaid, but it struggles to stay interesting beyond the movie’s gimmick.

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Paddington is taking names and making marmalade sandwiches. And he’s all out of marmalade.

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