Homestead 2024 - Movies (Jan 31st)
Piglet 2025 - Movies (Jan 31st)
Absolution 2024 - Movies (Jan 31st)
Dark Match 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
Omni Loop 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
The Fabulous Four 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
Maurice And I 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
The Club That George Built 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
Heretic 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
Wicked 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
The Line 2024 - Movies (Jan 30th)
The Girl with the Fork 2024 - Movies (Jan 29th)
Black Girls 2024 - Movies (Jan 29th)
Freelance 2024 - Movies (Jan 29th)
Flight Risk 2025 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Dark Night of the Soul 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Juror #2 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
The Fish Thief A Great Lakes Mystery 2025 - Movies (Jan 28th)
In Between Stars and Scars Masters of Cinema 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Loch Ness Monster Captured 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
Echoes Of A Hermit Solitude Resilience and the Power Of Writing 2024 - Movies (Jan 28th)
The Kelly Clarkson Show - (Oct 2nd)
High Tides - (Jan 31st)
The Eastern Gate - (Jan 31st)
The Chase - (Jan 31st)
TNA iMPACT - (Jan 31st)
Dexter- Original Sin - (Jan 31st)
Scamanda - (Jan 31st)
Southern Hospitality - (Jan 31st)
Malta- The Jewel of the Mediterranean - (Jan 31st)
Dateline- Unforgettable - (Jan 31st)
Ask This Old House - (Jan 31st)
Impractical Jokers - (Jan 31st)
This Old House - (Jan 31st)
Shoresy - (Jan 31st)
The Rachel Maddow Show - (Jan 31st)
Divided by Design - (Jan 31st)
The Last Word with Lawrence ODonnell - (Jan 31st)
Found - (Jan 31st)
Miss Shachiku and the Little Baby Ghost - (Jan 31st)
Someday at a Place in the Sun - (Jan 31st)
'Here' is one of the most original movies that I have personally seen, I can't say I've watched one that does anything like this. To tell such a story from (basically) a single camera angle is a brave choice, but it is one that Robert Zemeckis & Co. nail tremendously. I loved it. I would've predicted some slow moments and that the sole vantage point might've gotten repetitive/boring, happily neither of those two things occurred. There are plenty of events that keep it all interesting and the unique angle ensures freshness. Those on the cast are, of course, helpful too. Tom Hanks is as great as always, Robin Wright is also very good. Paul Bettany is, though, the one that stood out most to me, he is excellent at every moment. His character is most attached to all the more serious parts of this, most notably alongside Kelly Reilly's Rose. I saw this at the cinema as part of a double bill with Pablo Larraín's 'Maria'; randomly chosen due to the showtimes matching up with my schedule, but what a great four hours or so in front of the big screen it turned out to be. Quality viewing!
I really did quite like the concept behind this film. A sort of house-bound version of the "Truman Show" where a residence provides the continuity for the lives and loves of it's occupants over multiple generations. Our perspective comes from only one side of the room, looking out of the window at a grand Colonial mansion that once belonged to a Jefferson somewhere along the line. Right from the construction of this residence, we follow the lives of three distinct families, and the timelines are intertwined to avoid it just becoming a chronology of the place. It's also all interspersed by some native American imagery to remind us that this whole process of being born, breeding and dying is nothing new. The latter part of this film pulls the threads together of the mainstay of the storyline. The family of "Al" (Paul Bettany) and "Rose" (Kelly Reilly) who bring up their family and end up sharing in adulthood with their son "Richard" (Tom Hanks) and his wife "Margaret" (Robin Wright). It's this partnership that proves to the more turbulent as they find themselves trapped by his dead-end job, their dependancy on his parents for a roof over their head and as age overcomes all of these characters, the growing realisation that perhaps life is just passing - or has passed - them by. Robert Zemeckis has tried to construct something different here, and I did like that he didn't just trot a diary according to... The use of visually defined boxes to indicate to us that we are about to change timeline or storyline also, once you get used to it, works quite effectively, as does the use of the soundtrack to use music as a sign of changing attitudes. Sadly, though, the acting isn't really the sum of it's parts and the temptation to sink into the melodramatic seems to prove too much for all concerned. It is funny at times and the observational nature of the presentation can be poignant, too, but the flighty nature of the narrative is almost theatrical in style and doesn't allow us to really get our teeth into any of the characterisations. Wright increasingly underwhelms as an actor these days and here her pairing with te unremarkable Hanks comes across as all a bit shallow as we head a denouement that's rather clumsily telegraphed to us in the final fifteen minutes. It is an intriguing version of lives through a lense, and is certainly worth a watch. It's just a bit one-dimensional.
Minnie Goetze is a 15-year-old aspiring comic-book artist, coming of age in the haze of the 1970s in San Francisco. Insatiably curious about the world around her, Minnie is a pretty typical teenage girl. Oh, except that she’s sleeping with her mother’s boyfriend.
A gritty coming of age thriller about a young girl sent to juvenile prison for the murder of her abusive step father. The film follows Anna Nix's journey into the dark world of an all girls jail where she discovers complex relationships, drugs, mental illness and her eventual search for redemption.
Mike Sullivan works as a hit man for crime boss John Rooney. Sullivan views Rooney as a father figure, however after his son is witness to a killing, Mike Sullivan finds himself on the run in attempt to save the life of his son and at the same time looking for revenge on those who wronged him.
Sophia, a new high school student, tries to make friends with Barbara, who tells her that “she kills giants,” protecting this way her hometown and its inhabitants, who do not understand her strange behavior.
An average family is thrust into the spotlight after the father commits a seemingly self-defense murder at his diner.
After a powerful billionaire is murdered, his secret adoptive son must race to prove his legitimacy, find his father's killers and stop them from taking over his financial empire.
A knight framed for a tragic crime teams with a scrappy, shape-shifting teen to prove his innocence.
After being expelled from Beecher Prep for his treatment of a classmate with a facial deformity, Julian has struggled to fit in at his new school. To transform his life, Julian's grandmother finally reveals her own story of courage of her youth in Nazi-occupied France, where a classmate shelters her from mortal danger.
A feature film adaptation of Nick Drnaso’s graphic novel Sabrina. In the story, the murder of a woman named Sabrina spawns various conspiracy theories, and the book examines the impact these false narratives have on the lives of the victim's friends and family.
Brussels, Belgium, 1959. Michel and Charly Kichka, two Jewish brothers, enjoy a happy childhood with their parents and their two sisters. Henri, their discreet and usually silent father, does not speak at all about his past, so they imagine that as a young man he was an adventurer, a pirate or a treasure hunter.
A retired army sergeant, a police officer and his wife and a drug dealer apparently have nothing in common, but they will unite for a greater good. When people start using explosives to fish on the edge of Salvador, Bahia, this group will do everything to end this environmental crime. But in the search for the paths that seem most correct, each one of them will go through more personal and moral conflicts.