Alex Wolff
Forty-five years after Alien, cat people finally have a new horror movie with Michael Sarnoski’s “A Quiet Place: Day One.”
The Line is a well-oiled stress machine with its depiction of this pervasive, casually cruel facet of college life.
Despite a strong first half, Old, the latest nightmare from M. Night Shyamalan, quickly falls apart in the second half.
With excellent performances, gentle direction, and an incredibly moving musical score by Alexis Grapsas and Philip Klein, Pig was a big surprise.
Living alone in the Oregon wilderness, a truffle hunter returns to Portland to find the person who stole his beloved pig.
Castle In The Ground is undeniably effective in its portrayal of the opioid crisis, but loses itself in its hopeless narrative. Maria Lattila reviews.
With the strong talent behind the film, it isn’t hard to find things not to enjoy about the Stella’s Last Weekend.
As I flip through my senior year high school yearbook, I see the familiar faces…
Based on the real life personal experiences of writer and director James Steven Sadwith, Coming Through the Rye offers a strange and circuitous coming of age teen drama about a young boy named Jamie Schwartz who seeks out the reclusive author of “The Catcher in the Rye”, J.D. Salinger, in 1969 New Hampshire.