Tiffany Haddish
For better or for worse, Haunted Mansion makes for a fun spooky night on Disney+ for the family.
A darkly comic feature about two best friends, Val (Carmichael) and Kevin (Christopher Abbott), on the last day of their lives.
A cash-strapped Nicolas Cage agrees to make a paid appearance at a billionaire super fan’s birthday party, but is really an informant for the CIA.
The Card Counter, the latest film from writer/director Paul Schrader, is very much a companion piece to his earlier, existentialist efforts.
A card shark encounters an angry young man who’s seeking revenge against a military colonel.
Here there’s no such thing as taboo – and that, in the end, is the beauty of Jerrod Carmichael’s directorial debut On the Count of Three.
Like A Boss may not be the best comedy of the new decade, but it is unquestionably an entertaining film that is worth the watch.
In Bad Trip, two friends embark on a cross-country road trip where they prank people using hidden cameras.
Even with a few decent set-pieces and exceptional acting from the ensemble, The Kitchen is not the adaptation we deserve.
The Secret Life of Pets 2 is fine enough sequel, but never really explores all its potential. Debbie Lawrie reviews.
The wives of New York gangsters in Hell’s Kitchen in the 1970s continue to operate their husbands’ rackets after they’re locked up in prison.
Lisa Hanawalt’s colorful Tuca & Bertie explores womanhood, bodies, friendship and trauma – what it lacks in direction, it makes up for in sincerity.
A comedy with Haddish, Sumpter and Goldberg is a nice idea, but Nobody’s Fool soon makes you realize that you have been cat-fished.
Night School is unforgiveably bland. It’s difficult to care about anything that happens, because the jokes are so flat, and the characters so dull.