Olivia Wilde
An irresistible experience loaded with vulgarity, passion, and energy, Babylon is one big party of an intoxicating cinema explosion.
Don’t Worry Darling encourage passivity in their focus on the “seductiveness” of the material to the detriment of their politics.
While Don’t Worry Darling has some very good perks it ultimately tries to work with too many ideas without giving them one direction.
A psychological thriller about a 1950s housewife whose reality begins to crack, revealing a disturbing truth underneath.
A security guard saves thousands of lives from an exploding bomb at the 1996 Olympics, but is unjustly vilified by the press who falsely report that he was a terrorist.
Booksmart isn’t just a hilarious high school movie; it serves as a necessary reminder to rethink our initial judgments of people and actually try to get to know them instead.
In Booksmart, two academic superstars and best friends realize they should have worked less and played more so they try to cram four years of fun into one night.
Even as it skims too lightly over its complex themes, A Vigilante manages to capture a resilience and toughness that often goes unhailed on film.
Just when I thought coming-of-age fatigue is about to kick in, Booksmart overwhelms with its confident energy and wisdom.
In Sarah Daggar-Nickson’s A Vigilante, a female vigilante (Olivia Wilde) helps victims escape their domestic abusers.
Dan Fogelman’s Life Itself has heart, but it’s ultimately too shallow in execution to support his grander ambitions.