Cleaner 2025 - Movies (Aug 28th)
Ballerina 2025 - Movies (Aug 27th)
The Players 2025 - Movies (Aug 27th)
Au revoir 2024 - Movies (Aug 27th)
Oh Hi 2025 - Movies (Aug 27th)
Sketch 2024 - Movies (Aug 26th)
KPop Demon Hunters 2025 - Movies (Aug 26th)
Together 2025 - Movies (Aug 26th)
Stans 2025 - Movies (Aug 26th)
I Know What You Did Last Summer 2025 - Movies (Aug 26th)
Prepare to Die 2024 - Movies (Aug 26th)
Karate Kid Legends 2025 - Movies (Aug 26th)
Lilo and Stitch 2025 - Movies (Aug 26th)
Girl in the Cellar 2025 - Movies (Aug 25th)
Relay 2024 - Movies (Aug 24th)
Trust 2025 - Movies (Aug 24th)
The Assessment 2024 - Movies (Aug 24th)
Dear Stranger 2025 - Movies (Aug 23rd)
The Throwback 2024 - Movies (Aug 23rd)
Growing Happiness 2024 - Movies (Aug 23rd)
A New Kind of Wilderness 2024 - Movies (Aug 23rd)
The Rebuild- Inside the Montreal Canadiens - (Aug 28th)
Dinner Time Live with David Chang - (Aug 28th)
Skin Decision- Before and After - (Aug 28th)
Botched Presents- Plastic Surgery Rewind - (Aug 28th)
Sesame Street - (Aug 28th)
Joselines Cabaret California - (Aug 28th)
Tyler Perrys Sistas - (Aug 28th)
Battle of the Generations - (Aug 28th)
New Zealand Tomorrow - (Aug 28th)
Gogglebox Australia - (Aug 28th)
Drag Race Philippines- Slaysian Royale - (Aug 28th)
The 11th Hour with Stephanie Ruhle - (Aug 28th)
SAKAMOTO DAYS - (Aug 28th)
The Beechgrove Garden - (Aug 28th)
The Chase Australia - (Aug 28th)
Americas Got Talent- Fantasy League - (Aug 28th)
Digman - (Aug 28th)
All the Queens Men - (Aug 28th)
True Crime Story- Smugshot - (Aug 28th)
Bangers and Cash - (Aug 28th)
I suppose a bit better than Apocalypse as it feels a bit more mainstreamed in the plot and action, still not great but some of the fight sequences were okay and has some semblance of interesting ideas and I still like Jovovich in the role even if she's not the strongest actress, but does have some screen presence in this sort of movie. Being so short, you don't get to know Ali Larter's character all that well and felt odd that Jill (Sienna Guillory) and Angie's (Sophie Vavasseur) absences weren't mentioned (that I can remember). **2.5/5**
**Overall : The final horror-focused entry of the franchise with high stakes and some great new characters.** The third movie in the Resident Evil franchise and the beginning slide into outright sci-fi action. Most of this entry focuses on survivors attempting to withstand the dangers of a zombie-filled apocalyptic desert. Unfortunately, umbrella’s experiments on Alice have results that sometimes become the focus and begin dragging the franchise further from survival horror. I enjoyed this entry with the addition of Claire Redfield from the games, the return of Carlos Olivera, and the hopelessness of the deadly sun-scorched wasteland continually claiming the lives of the struggling survivors. But Alice’s superpowers distract from the core of what makes this franchise great: surviving zombie horror.
This one is kind of boring till you get to the end. They try to stop the umbrella company from infecting everyone in world. Also try to save Alice while being experienmented on.
Resident Evil: Extinction is a must-watch. The movie follows Alice as she navigates a desert wasteland, battling mutated zombies and discovering the shocking truth of Umbrella’s experiments. The action is relentless, the stakes keep rising, and by the end, Alice uncovers an army of her own clones, setting up an epic fight against Umbrella. With a gritty, Mad Max-style atmosphere, this film delivers on thrills and suspense. Highly recommended for fans of sci-fi and horror!
Resident Evil: Extinction (2007) takes the franchise in a full post-apocalyptic direction, but the execution stumbles along the way. The story has a few interesting ideas, like the cloning subplot, but it lacks depth and struggles to keep engagement. The first act drags on endlessly, the second act picks up slightly, and the climax, while unique in some ways, fails to deliver the punch it needed. It feels like the movie is more focused on style than substance, which might have worked better if the pacing was tighter. The directing and editing are a mess, making the action scenes frustrating to watch. The shaky cam is back, and somehow, it is worse than in Apocalypse, making some moments borderline unwatchable. The overuse of quick cuts doesn’t help either, making it feel like the action is happening in pieces rather than flowing naturally. That being said, the cinematography has some cool moments, especially in the desert setting, and the final battle at least tries to be creative. Milla Jovovich remains the glue holding everything together. Even when the plot loses steam, she keeps things somewhat enjoyable with her commanding presence and well-executed fight scenes. The script, unfortunately, does not add much, with weak dialogue and little emotional weight. The soundtrack sticks to the industrial rock vibe, but at this point, it feels like the series is relying on style to cover up a lack of substance. Overall, Extinction has moments that work, but it feels more like an action movie trying to throw in zombies rather than a true continuation of what made the first film engaging.
Two young male metalheads get locked and trapped inside a bombed out town and have to face the repercussions of a nuclear fallout and radiation poisoning while a supernatural horror begins to engulf their lives.
A professional surf photographer chases down the largest surf ever seen in hopes of capturing a once in a lifetime image. What he receives is much more than that.
Six thirty-somethings try to spice up their stale marriages with a sexy weekend at a secluded cabin. An Amish farmer's corpse is resurrected when a Satanic sex act goes awry, and his murderous rampage stops the orgy dead in its tracks.
Set six months after a deadly outbreak has all but ended the human race, a man and woman have survived by isolating themselves in a remote cabin and never opening the door. Now they don’t have a choice. Starved for resources, they must confront the horrors that threaten them… but what’s inside may be even more toxic than what remains outside. When it all ends, this is what remains.
A rash of bizarre murders in New York City seems to point to a group of grotesquely deformed vagrants living in the sewers. A courageous policeman, a photojournalist and his girlfriend, and a nutty bum, who seems to know a lot about the creatures, band together to try and determine what the creatures are and how to stop them.
A film adaptation of the 1606 satirical tragedy by Thomas Middleton, relocated to a post-apocalyptic Liverpool. Christopher Eccleston plays the revenge-obsessed Vindice, who has sworn to kill the evil Duke (Derek Jacobi) who murdered his one true love.
After a nuclear war society breaks down into two groups, the evil Euraks, and the rebel Federation. A mercenary named Parsifal is hired by the Federation to infiltrate New York City, which is controlled by the Euraks, to rescue the only fertile woman left on Earth.
Amy and Mike unearth a centuries-old curse when they decide to watch an exclusive film reel. The duo must track down an infamous filmmaker and navigate a town of hungry zombies to save the world.
Under constant attack by monstrous creatures called Angels that seek to eradicate humankind, U.N. Special Agency NERV introduces two new EVA pilots to help defend the city of Tokyo-3: the mysterious Makinami Mari Illustrous and the intense Asuka Langley Shikinami. Meanwhile, Gendo Ikari and SEELE proceed with a secret project that involves both Rei and Shinji.
Set in Tokyo's otaku mecca Akihabara, "Akihabara@DEEP" tells the story of five otaku who drop out of society and end up founding their own successful IT venture called Crook. But Nakagomi, president of an influential electronics company called Digital Capital, will do anything to get his hands on Crook.
2068, the ozone layer is gone and the world is a wasteland. A band of mercenaries attempt to break into a Estate that is guarded by a automated defence system called "Encrypt" in order to steal priceless artwork.