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Netflix is bringing more science fiction into our homes with Mute, the latest from writer/director Duncan Jones.
In When We First Met, Noah spends the perfect first night with the girl of his dreams, but gets friend-zoned. He spends the next 3 years wondering what went wrong – until he gets the chance to travel back in time and alter that night – and his fate – over and over again.
While a handful of trailers from 2017 did their job, they were the exception, not the rule. If the box office is to improve in 2018, we need better trailers that are more than just boring, random CGI explosions.
Ant-Man and the Wasp marks the return of Ant-Man, with help from Hope van Dyne, who will don her Wasp suit for the first time.
Considering the amount of people online who seem to like Nicolas Cage in an ironic way, it’s easy to forget he can do great work when working with talented directors, like in Looking Glass.
Don’t Worry, He Won’t Get Far on Foot tells the story of John Callahan (Joaquin Phoenix), a cartoonist, artist and musician who became a quadriplegic after a car accident at age 21.
Unsane sees Soderbergh return to questions of the mind with the tale of a young woman being wrongly placed in a mental institution.
True crime and longstanding sociopolitical issues are explored in Did You Wonder Who Fired the Gun?, a documentary that mines director Travis Wilkerson’s own family history.
Mad to Be Normal, starring David Tennant as the controversial psychiatrist Doctor Laing, offers a very interesting look at psychiatry, both from the viewpoint of a psychiatrist and that of his patients.
While Dear Dictator’s premise, a young girl being a pen pal to a former dictator and befriending him, might seem very silly, it’s actually based on a true story. Isn’t life a great treasure trove of weird stories?
In TRAFFIK, a bunch of friends get into trouble with a criminal gang, and things don’t look like they’ll turn out well for them. Directed by Deon Taylor, starring Paula Patton.
In Braven, a logger (Jason Momoa) is forced to protect his family from a gang trying to recover the drug money they’ve hidden on his property.
The personal and the political blend in Beirut, the latest thriller from director Brad Anderson. Setting the film in Beirut means they’ve got a long history of upheaval to pull from, but it also comes with it’s share of controversies.
The American justice system has been under heavy scrutiny lately, and another low point is being brought up in Bomb City.
Political scandals are as old as government itself, but few revolve around an event as senselessly tragic as the one dramatized in Chappaquiddick.