Sidebar Search

Siren

(2018)

grip me, thrill me, transport me ·

From Cade Taylor at Tell-Tale TV:

Although mermaids are a well-known folklore creature, there aren’t many TV shows that cover the topic, which gives Siren an advantage because this is entirely like nothing we’ve seen before.

Read more
Sidebar Search

Skate Kitchen

(2018)

enlighten me, inspire me, transport me ·

From Matt Zoller Seitz at RogerEbert.com:

A solid hangout movie as well as a band-of-buddies film genres that tend to revolve around young men. It’s also a movie that deliberately blurs the line between documentary and fiction: the main characters are all real New York skaters who are playing characters who are very close to themselves in real life.

Read more
Sidebar Search

Solo: A Star Wars Story

(2018)

stretch my mind, take me back, thrill me, transport me ·

From A.O. Scott at The New York Times:

It doesn’t take itself too seriously, but it also holds whatever irreverent, anarchic impulses it might possess in careful check.

Read more
Sidebar Search

Sorry to Bother You

(2018)

make me laugh, stretch my mind ·

From A.O. Scott at The New York Times:

Mr. Riley isn’t constructing yet another postmodern playhouse out of borrowings and allusions. He’s building a raft, and steering it straight into the foaming rapids of racism, economic injustice and cultural conflict.

Read more
Sidebar Search

Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse

(2018)

give me hope, make me laugh, thrill me, transport me ·

From K. Austin Collins at Vanity Fair:

Spider-Verse is a dreamy, funny, self-aware, visually explosive delight, with a sharper sense of humor than the sophomoric, wearying Deadpool, a keener, more kinetic sense of action than most of the live-action Avengers films (save maybe Ant-Man), and richer ideas than most of the visually muddy, self-serious DC films we’ve gotten to date.

Read more
Sidebar Search

Support the Girls

(2018)

give me hope, inspire me, make me laugh ·

From Leah Greenblatt at Entertainment Weekly:

To see a black female over 40 holding the center of a story about ordinary, unsung lives makes Support a low-key pleasure; one that transcends its own shaggy narrative.

Read more