Disney
The Ballad of Songbirds and Snakes and the rising popularity of YA, especially on TikTok, show that there is still a bright future ahead for YA adaptations.
The travels of a lone bounty hunter in the outer reaches of the galaxy, far from the authority of the New Republic.
Hocus Pocus 2 is like pulling out that year-old candy from last Halloween and being mildly surprised it doesn’t taste that bad.
On top of being a visually breathtaking feat of animation, Sleeping Beauty is an incredibly unique film in the classic Disney princess canon.
Lightyear may not offer the same emotional depth or richness as other Pixar titles, but it knows it never needed to be that.
Combined with Vaughn’s ability, there’s a genuine surprise to this entry that may make this the best of the series.
Thus far, Marvel and Disney’s Hawkeye is proving to be an entertaining romp that doesn’t feel as bound by the MCU timeline.
While the purpose of What If? may be to prime the fanbase for multiverse madness, its secondary function is one of image and branding.
Jungle Cruise is far from cringe or embarrassment, and sure, it’s never actively terrible. But the bar shouldn’t be set this low.
Cruella is a welcome return to the good, dark, bold filmmaking that we haven’t seen in a long time from Disney.
It might be conventional in its storytelling, but the stunning animation, lovely characters, beautiful music, and heartfelt messages won me over.
Penguins: Life on the Edge continues to be remarkable, capturing filmmakers risking life and limb to bring us footage of wonders yet unseen.
For a true story about changing the rules, Safety sticks strictly to the dusty sports drama playbook.
Ultimately it can’t sustain moments in the same way as the likes of Inside Out, but it’s certainly worth investing time into.