Doug Liman
The Instigators evokes the Boston movies of yore like a Dunkin’ drinkin’ Ghost of Christmas Past.
Rory and Cobby are unlikely partners thrown together, but when it goes awry, they team up to outrun police, backward bureaucrats, and a vengeful crime boss.
Three of the biggest headliners this year’s SXSW Film Festival are action movies, featuring some of the craziest fist fights seeen on the big screen.
As an action film, Chaos Walking works, it’s a fun popcorn flick, but It’s a pity most of these characters can’t stop talking.
Locked Down was definitely a surprise success, delivering unsuspecting nostalgia and examining the freedom of anarchy.
A quarreling couple make peace in order to take advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic and pull off a jewellery heist at the department store Harrods.
Two people, in a dystopian world where men’s thoughts are fully heard and the women are all but non-existent, on the run from a villainous mayor.
In this segment of Time Crisis, we look back at the 2014 hit Edge of Tomorrow, examining why this is the best time loop film since Groundhog Day.
Laying blame is a difficult one because nothing is particularly awful in American Made: even the screenplay peppers a handful of decent set pieces and sequences throughout – but there’s nobody on-hand to elevate the picture.
In biographical crime film, American Made, a pilot (Tom Cruise) finds work in the CIA as a drug runner in the 1980s.
The Wall has a kick-ass ending worth shouting about- it’s just a shame the journey there is significantly less interesting.
Doug Liman is taking audiences back to war with The Wall, but the enemy is much more terrestrial this time around.
In Edge of Tomorrow, Earth is hit by a meteor infested with a strange and highly violent alien species called the Mimics. They immediately start to destroy the world, and everything the humans do is futile. The alien species is strong and fast, and more importantly, has control over time – though no one (aside from a very select few) is aware of it.