James McAvoy
Ever since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, filmmakers have generated embellished tales of horror…
His Dark Materials is an adventure story at its core, and we’re finally starting to get into the adventuring.
If the rest of the season of His Dark Materials is as good as its second episode, we’re in for a great season.
His Dark Materials is, at its core, a story of adventure, so strap in and let’s see where the zeppelins take us.
The losers are as compelling as before, Chapter Two successfully binds this group to its former to give fans a nuanced end.
It Chapter Two takes place 27 years later; the Losers Club have grown up and moved away, until a devastating phone call brings them back.
Glass may have been a film nineteen years in the making, but it feels superfluous and incredibly out of touch in a world littered with superhero films.
More so than the previous feature adaptation, Watership Down is a bold allegorical tale that is best kept from the eyes of younger viewers.
Jean Grey begins to develop incredible powers that corrupt and turn her into a Dark Phoenix. The X-Men will have to decide if the life of a team member is worth more than all the people living in the world.
Glass blends M. Night Shyamalan’s Split & Unbreakable, pitting Unbreakable’s security guard (Bruce Willis) against Split’s creature (James McAvoy).
This belated sequel to Gnomeo and Juliet poorly attempts to expand the cinematic universe – and merely exposes the poor storytelling within.
Atomic Blonde may be sloppy in structure, but it is oozing with immaculately executed action and a finely tuned performance by Theron.
The recent film Split deals with dissociative identity disorder – today, we touch upon what it must be like to play that many roles in one.
James McAvoy shines in M. Night Shyamalan’s latest, in which he portrays an array of characters as a man who suffers from dissociative identity disorder.