Spy (Feig, 2015)
Here’s the twist: Spy was funny.
Here’s the twist: Spy was funny.
From Paris With Love is not going to make Signed, Sealed, Delivered the next breakout show, but on a weekend where the choices at the multiplex are pretty crass (Entourage, Spy), it's a serviceable diversion for the audience segment that eschews R-rated films altogether.
Evan Cogswell gives 4/5 stars to Belle and Sebastian: "Great Pyrenees are beautiful dogs, and the one the filmmakers got to play Belle is absolutely elegant."
This much talked about documentary from Sundance is now on Netflix. I reviewed it for Christianity Today Movies & TV.
Spinney realizes the similarities between himself and Big Bird, and acknowledges the influence that the show and the character have had on his life.
Billed as "The Film Hollywood Doesn't Want You to See," Amy Berg's documentary claims the practice of child molestation in the entertainment industry is pervasive.
We call natural disasters "Acts of God," but we struggle to square them with our providential worldview.
The remarkable thing about Our Man in Tehran is its ability (much like Rory Kennedy's Last Days in Vietnam which also played at the festival) to take a complex situation and distill it without being reductive.
The relationship between suffering and comedy is hardly an unexamined one. Think for a moment: what do we mean by comic "relief"? Relief from what?
Fury Road has set a high bar for action films: fully realized world, fully fleshed out characters, fantastic performances, and breathtaking visuals, all going full steam ahead without wearing the audience out