Reviews

[Review] Dr. Cabbie

Sweet and silly, Dr. Cabbie follows in the footsteps of broad Bollywood and Canadian comedies melding both sensibilities into a contemporary narrative that’s as...

[Review] Zero Motivation

When thinking about the Israeli army, images of badass Mossad agents covertly wreaking havoc across the world crop up. It's a hyperbolic generalization, but tha...

[Review] Dying of the Light

Getting a great turn from Nicolas Cage — a disturbingly physical performer who can go from 0 to 10 in the blink of an eye -- requires the considerate crafting o...

[Review] Horrible Bosses 2

Arriving to the cinematic Thanskgiving table like that chunky jello salad no one recalls asking for, Horrible Bosses 2 proves to be more of the same forced, unn...

[Review] A Most Violent Year

J.C. Chandor’s A Most Violent Year starts out on just the right moody note for a searing, low-level crime drama; a young oil truck driver is waylaid by thugs wh...

[Review] The Mule

Directors Tony Mahony and Angus Sampson's The Mule is not at all what one might expect. The marketing materials draw it up as a B-movie romp, something the invo...

[AFI Fest Review] Tu dors Nicole

It’s perhaps possible that the whimsical nature of Tu dors Nicole would be rather unbearable in the form of an American studio comedy, the kind that fills the a...