‘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

Kate Winslet and Idris Elba are out-acted by a yellow labrador in this laughable survival movie weighed down by a romantic subplot

Steve Jobs is essentially a three-scene movie but it’s so rat-a-tat compelling that we’re glued to the screen throughout

A Little Chaos might be lightweight in conception, but it’s brought to vivid life through some evocative atmosphere and rich performances

Internal logic takes a holiday in Insurgent, the sequel to last year’s Divergent and adaptation of the middle book in Veronica Roth’s young adult trilogy

Divergent is set in a post-apocalyptic future Chicago where citizens are divided into five distinctive factions based on their personality type

Labor Day might be shamelessly indulgent melodrama, but this kind of Douglas Sirk throwback is almost a breath of fresh air

Movie 43, a parade of Saturday Night Live-style skits that intends to shock you with poor taste, is missing just one thing: the jokes

Roman Polanski’s Carnage is short, sweet, and unexpectedly funny, even if it isn’t as sharp as it ought to be

Contagion is one of the scariest films of 2011 – germaphobes watch at their own risk

The Reader, based on the novel by Bernhard Schlink, raises a lot of interesting moral questions

Revolutionary Road is a real downer of a film buoyed by some phenomenal acting

Todd Field´s sophomore feature Little Children is a compelling, captivating experience.