Inside a darkened bedroom in Colombia, a son (Edison Raigosa) gasps for air. His family is surrounding his fragile frame, looking on in anguish as he lets out c...
Somewhat likable if too silly for its own good, Puerto Ricans in Paris is the kind of film that might one day find itself adapted into a sitcom. Directed by Ian...
Considering Dwayne Johnson's relatively newfound dedication as Hollywood's action franchise Viagra and Kevin Hart becoming perhaps the biggest draw in comedy ov...
The ocean is a big, diverse setting for a movie, consisting as it does of environments both brutal and beautiful. In Finding Nemo, one of its most celebrated fi...
Since the start of the millennium, Ti West has been pigeonholed as a horror director, but even from the beginning, his interest in the genre moved far beyond c...
Osgood Perkins’ debut feature, The Blackcoat’s Daughter - originally known as February at its premiere at TIFF last year - is a stylish exercise in dread, teas...
About halfway through both Jean Renoir’s and Luis Buñuel’s interpretations of Octave Mirbeau’s 1900 class satire, A Diary of A Chambermaid, there’s a scene whe...
The Conjuring series has developed into probably the apex of contemporary popular horror cinema, about as skillfully made as one can expect a thematically uncha...
To say that the world of magic or magicians is having a renaissance might be overselling things a bit, but it cannot be denied that films related to the world o...
The real mystery is how Elizabeth Allen Rosenbaum's Careful What You Wish For got itself a theatrical release in the first place — no matter how limited. I'm no...