
‘Weekend in Taipei’ movie review: Luke Evans and Sung Kang in Luc Besson-produced actioner
Fast & Furious franchise stars Luke Evans and Sung Kang star in this diverting action film from the Luc Besson factory.
Fast & Furious franchise stars Luke Evans and Sung Kang star in this diverting action film from the Luc Besson factory.
The Independence Day director’s latest film, procedural-style account of the key WWII battle in the Pacific, is one of his best
Committed performances by Luke Evans and Kelly Reilly, along with some twists and turns, liven up this nifty little two-hander
Vin Diesel and co. are back with more of the same, though this might be the series’ second-best entry after Fast Five
Disney’s latest live-action remake of a beloved cartoon does little more than remind us of the earlier film
What did she see? Emily Blunt holds the key to unlocking a mystery, but she was blackout drunk at the time
Peter Jackson’s The Battle of Five Armies lives up to its title with a epic extended battle sequence that goes on for nearly an hour
Bram Stoker’s creation enters the world of George R. R. Martin in Dracula Untold, a vampire movie that features precious little gothic horror
The Hobbit: Desolation of Smaug provides a response to critics of the first film, opening and closing with two enormous action set pieces
Action movies don’t get more preposterous than the latest entry in the Fast & the Furious franchise, a go-for-broke cartoon spectacle
The Raven might have been fascinating had it painted a more believable portrait of Poe’s last days
Immortals, a Greek mythology spectacle coming in the wake of 300 and Clash of the Titans, is a guilty pleasure; very guilty
The Three Musketeers, from Resident Evil helmer Paul W.S. Anderson, is not a definitive adaptation of the Alexandre Dumas classic
The one real problem with this Clash of the Titans is the script, which suffers from that big-budget too-many-cooks-in-the-kitchen syndrome