The charisma of Macaulay Culkin matched with the intelligent script by John Hughes makes Home Alone the definitive holiday story that it is, appealing to all ages.
With an electrifying trailer and the whole cast set to return, the Chilling Adventures of Sabrina seems poised for one epic sophomore season.
A well-acted, mostly captivating, and wholly unpredictable noir, Back Roads is an impressive directorial debut for Pettyfer, who pulls double-duty in his strongest screen performance yet.
Anna and the Apocalypse is a roller-coaster of inspired madness, great music, and surprising emotional weight.
National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation isn’t the finest Xmas movie you’ll ever see, but it’s disarmingly heartfelt at times.
Swiped is a satire that misses the mark, and comes across as a rather dated look at relationships and the differences between men and women.
Adam McKay’s Vice is at its best when it mixes information with entertainment and leaves out all of the preaching.
In The Best of Enemies, civil rights activist Ann Atwater faces off against the Exalted Cyclops of the Ku Klux Klan over the issue of school integration.
Paris, Texas readily evokes a bit of the ruggedness of the Old West, reflecting the degradation of this vast country as much as the austere beauty.
We break down the career of Dave Franco, who transitions from the inherently unlikable pseudo-villains to the everyman, unconventional heroes, and some bizarre characters sprinkled in between.
Between Worlds has potential in its more surreal moments, but it never utilizes the tension and conflict that could come from this story.
Netflix is here to give you a little dose of Christmas cheer with a haunting and terrifying holiday at the Spellman’s Mortuary.