Hey Guys, Where Have You Been? Bill & Ted Face the Music

By Elias Savada. Here’s an inane and silly tonic, one that might lift people’s souls in these sad times. Like Santa Claus coming down the chimney at Christmas, Bill & Ted Face the Music offers a crazed, intoxicating gift” It’s been nearly three decades since Keanu Reeves and Alex Winter […]

What We Already Know, Too Well – Unfit: The Psychology of Donald Trump

By Michael Sandlin. Dan Partland’s well-intended but flawed documentary has at least done its democratic duty and created a forum for these previously silenced psychiatrists to outline just how much of a deranged wingnut Donald Trump really is.” In some ways, it seems almost unfair to single out Donald Trump […]

“Middle of the Road” Survival: Brendan Walsh’s Centigrade

By Thomas Puhr. Maybe not all true stories, however incredible, are well suited for cinematic adaptation; I would rather have seen a documentary about these events.” It’s becoming increasingly difficult to separate new films from COVID-19. Any 2020 release in which characters find themselves confined to small spaces (Relic) or […]

A Total Vision: The Twilight Zone by Barry Keith Grant (TV Milestone Series)

“The Monsters are Due on Maple Street” (1.22, 4 March 1960) A Book Review by Ali Moosavi. Grant states that his aim was to ‘offer the most productive and comprehensive account of The Twilight Zone possible.’ He has undoubtedly succeeded….” The Twilight Zone, created by Rod Serling, is undoubtedly one […]

Last Stop for the Train to Busan: Yeon Sang-ho’s Peninsula

By Elias Savada. All the things that made the original so great are lacking in its new CGI-heavy follow-up. Its heart is still pumping with adrenaline, though” You know the saying. If at first you don’t succeed, try, try again. The problem with South Korean fillmmaker Yeon Sang-ho’s new zombie […]

When Man Becomes Animal: Jimmy Henderson’s The Prey

By Thomas Puhr. Henderson version of Connell’s ‘The Most Dangerous Game’ quickly ditches visual fluidity once the hunt begins and instead settles for a series of repetitive shootouts and sequences of aimless wandering” With its brisk pacing, memorable characters (Count Zaroff is a blueprint for countless villains), and tailored-for-classroom-discussion themes […]

Something Ominous, Indeed: The Unfamiliar

By Ali Moosavi. Ever since the success and huge profit margin of films such as Halloween, Friday the 13th, etc., there has been a deluge of horror films, producing more franchises than McDonalds. They tend to follow one of a number of well-established templates; a mad, seemingly indestructible killer on […]

Not for Publication (1984): Paul Bartel’s Misspent Misprint

By Rod Lott. Nancy Allen is always engaging to watch but is left to tread water since her screen partner lacks the comic spark the role requires” In part due to her five-year marriage to Brian De Palma, actress Nancy Allen has had to do lots of humiliating and vulnerable […]