‘Avatar: The Way of Water’ movie review: James Cameron’s return to Pandora a technical marvel
James Cameron’s epic sequel might be an even bigger game changer for the industry than the original, but narrative flaws are more apparent
James Cameron’s epic sequel might be an even bigger game changer for the industry than the original, but narrative flaws are more apparent
Seth MacFarlane’s talking bear is back in Ted 2, an intermittently uproarious comedy that lumbers to an ungainly 115-minute running time
There’s just one problem with Seth MacFarlane’s A Million Ways to Die in the West: it isn’t very funny
Gangster Squad is a high-profile, high-energy, overdone and undercooked version of a purportedly true story
Ted may not be as quick and loose as an episode of Family Guy, but it’s still great fun that manages to keep our interest in-between the laughs
Baltasar Kormákur’s Contraband lacks any kind of ambition but gets the job done as a B-movie caper flick with the cast to match
The Rum Diary is a revealing and affectionate look into a creative mind not yet fully formed
Avatar is a technical revolution in filmmaking, as director James Cameron has mastered motion-capture animation
Public Enemies, starring Christian Bale and Johnny Depp, is Michael Mann’s finest film: an out-and-out masterpiece and an immense technical achievement
Perfect Stranger is strictly late-night cable fare that should have stayed that way