A tense and surprisingly creature heavy premiere that proves Derry has way more horrors than a single clown.
Who knew surviving astronaut training, zero gravity, and secret love could all make you feel simultaneously heroic and like a nervous physics student again?
I thought Roofman would be a silly heist comedy, then suddenly I was emotionally invested in a guy hiding in a Toys R Us.
Pretending your life has a soundtrack might be slightly extra, but it’s also the only thing keeping Thursday from being a total tragedy.
I know I shouldn’t watch it, but somehow I have to see what happens next.
I picked this up for the chaos and stayed for the storyline…apparently I’m the only one who cared about the plot, but I regret nothing.
I went in expecting a sweet rom-com and came out emotionally wrecked, inspired, and somehow laughing through tears.
A beautifully shot film about childhood and chaos, The Florida Project is less about plot and more about perspective, and whether you can stomach living in someone else’s unfiltered reality for two hours.
Tron: Ares is a neon-soaked thrill ride that dazzles in sound and visuals. The story isn’t perfect, but the Dolby theater experience makes it a sensory adventure worth seeing.
Ever wonder how two people can read the same book and have completely opposite reactions? The secret isn’t in the story, it’s in the psychology of how our brains interpret it.
