Mila Kunis
Delivering solid and unforgettable performances from Glenn Close and Mila Kunis, Four Good Days is brilliantly done, and quietly effective.
Jupiter Ascending was a critical and a box office failure. Aaron Berry examines it from the point of view of the directors’ own transition.
Black Swan analyzes the pressure of perfection that is forced upon women by society, highlighting its long-lasting detrimental effects.
Wonder Park should be fine family viewing, but it is lacking in terms of storytelling and the world building design.
There’s certainly fun to be had with this deeply silly slice of R-rated raunchiness, yet The Spy Who Dumped Me struggles to balance its crass brand of humor with shocking bursts of carnage.
Bad Moms threatens to turn into a women-centric Seth Rogen movie, and it could easily have fallen off that particular cliff. Fortunately the movie and the audience are spared that fate, largely because the moms aren’t really that bad, and that’s the point of the movie. These women are overstressed, overworked and under-appreciated, but they’re trying.
Let’s say Star Wars meets The Matrix. What comes to mind? An all-out intergalactic battle?