Fear Street: Part Two – 1978 is a charming and at times, heartfelt horror film, but its moments of horror are often hidden from the viewer, creating a film that does not fully embrace its potential.
This week, Jesse is joined by Film Inquiry Editor in Chief Kristy Strouse to talk all things Marvel!
Forty years of never-before-seen footage chronicling the life of Val Kilmer.
With its uneasy blend of action, comedy, and familial drama, Gunpowder Milkshake is ultimately an underwhelming movie.
As we wait for No Time To Die, Jake Tropila takes a look at Never Say Never Again, the only unofficial James Bond film starring Sean Connery.
This week Joe and Blake have differing opinions about George Armitage’s Neo-noir Miami Blues.
For this week’s entry of Queerly Ever After, we take a look at 2002 French TV-movie You’ll Get Over It.
With excellent performances, gentle direction, and an incredibly moving musical score by Alexis Grapsas and Philip Klein, Pig was a big surprise.
Two hapless losers discover a giant fly in the trunk of a stolen car and decide to domesticate it in a bizarre get-rich-quick scheme.
Fear Street Part One: 1994 is a fun, energetic slasher with enjoyable characters, an interesting overarching plot, and heartfelt relationships.
Tomu Uchida’s Bloody Spear at Mount Fuji is a masterpiece, offering a complex rewriting of Japanese national mythology.
In Borderlands, six lives have been woven together seamlessly to symbolize the continuum of life and inseparability of human agency.
A blind veteran must use his military training to save a young orphan from a group of kidnappers.
Externo is a definite recommendation for those searching for something out of the ordinary in terms of storytelling and high concept.
The debut feature from Saudi Arabian filmmaker Shahad Ameen, Scales weaponizes repressed femininity in the…