A Star Is Born (2018) – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
A Star Is Born starts strong and burns bright but, by the end, you’ll be burnt out as it sludges its way to the finish.
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A Star Is Born starts strong and burns bright but, by the end, you’ll be burnt out as it sludges its way to the finish.
3rd Night lacks potential scares despite holding many elements most horror movies have to conjure up fear.
Cruise may not cause butterflies or be the best star-crossed romance you’ve ever seen, but it is a decent way to kill an hour and a half.
With paltry jump scares, and a killer with very little motive, besides being rude to him, Hell Fest will only scare up the desire to maybe go to a real horror fest.
While this won’t go down as the best we’ve seen from Kevin Hart or Tiffany Haddish, comedy-wise, there is a deeper message which compensates for that.
While Smallfoot may give some adults pause with topics dealing with questioning authority and religion, it’s message of unity kind of compensates for that.
While the message is clear and strong in Nappily Ever After, the story, by comparison, is a tad weak.
Life Itself will leave you crying in the worse way. I’m talking gasping for air, with a burning throat, for the devastation is too much.
Covering the first 17 episodes of the animated series, Bleach feels like a to the point movie cutting the majority of filler, and probably some essential characters.
White Boy Rick seems to follow a worn out list of what “Based on a True Story” films must do and thus lacks anything to make this feel truly different from the rest.