Jim Gaffigan
The direction, the cinematography, the lighting, all of it mesh together to highlight the wild and always forward story that is Greedy People.
While delivering an updated depiction of the inventor, Tesla falters in its attempt to deliver the true brilliance of Nikola Tesla.
Troop Zero is a feel-good film in every sense of the word and it is the hope of this critic that people find and cherish this film.
Sadly, Playmobil The Movie merely serves as a reminder of how studios forcing a film around a product didn’t always make for the greatest of entertainment.
In Light from Light, a single mom and part-time paranormal investigator is asked to look into a possible “haunting” at a widower’s farmhouse in Tennessee.
The Day Shall Come is a dark, biting commentary on systemic racism of law enforcement and the weird Kafkaesque nature of the War on Terror.
The Day Shall Come is so cartoonish that it just doesn’t feel believable or possible, let alone historical fact.
The narrative debut of director Miranda Bailey, You Can Choose Your Family, is a misjudged dark comedy that earns enough goodwill through the committed performances from its ensemble.