Movie Review: Apparently, You Can Go ‘Home Again’
This mild romantic comedy starring Reese Witherspoon is light on substance, but big on heart
This mild romantic comedy starring Reese Witherspoon is light on substance, but big on heart
Though divisive, fashion designer-turned-movie director Tom Ford’s second film to date is one of the year’s most riveting experiences
Swashbuckling Alice must save The Mad Hatter from depression – by travelling through time – in this not-so-wonderful sequel
The hoary old clichés of Thomas Hardy’s Far from the Madding Crowd don’t exactly mesh well with director Thomas Vinterberg’s low-key approach
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 2 is all Sturm und Drang and endless exposition, and yet nothing is really happening
The Twilight Saga: Breaking Dawn – Part 1 is glorious trash that fully embraces the sheer silliness of its source material and very nearly transcends it
Midnight in Paris is a shade of Woody Allen that we haven’t seen since 1985’s The Purple Rose of Cairo
TRON: Legacy is mesmerizing as as a two-hour music Daft Punk music video, a triumph of art design that’s fully captivating on style alone
Alice in Wonderland for the Lord of the Rings/Chronicles of Narnia crowd, complete with a battlefield action climax
The Twilight Saga: New Moon is an unbearable slog that will appeal to fans of the series and leave all others twitching in their seats
Ron Howard’s Frost/Nixon fleshes out the famous 1977 TV interview between British talk-show host David Frost and former US president Richard Nixon
Underworld: Rise of the Lycans gives us what we might expect from a vampires vs. werewolves movie
Helen Mirren has been showered with praise for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II, and deservedly so