Summertime Madness: Sun-Scorched Horror

Are you tired of social media self-loathing? Well, I have good news: you can re-direct your negative vibes onto ill-fated movie characters who will have you screaming and cursing quietly as they get scorched by horrible summertime decisions. Here are four psychological thrillers — all currently streaming on Shudder — in which morally conflicted individuals […]

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REVIEW: Unlike Life, Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom Does Not Find a Way

Bad news, everyone: dinosaurs are boring now. People were so preoccupied with whether they could make a fifth Jurassic Park movie, they didn’t stop to think if they should. Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom, a direct sequel to 2015’s passable but familiar Jurassic World, is missing nearly everything that made the original so much fun 25 years […]

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20 Years Later, the Truth About X-Files: Fight the Future Is Still out There

In 1993, before binge-watching was feasible and when most TV shows were made to be as accessible as possible, a drama series broke new ground, splitting its episodes between heavily serialized “mythology” installments and stand-alone “monster of the week” entries. That show was Chris Carter’s The X-Files, and it was a genre amalgam as well, […]

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Idea Missing: Steven Soderbergh’s Strange Schizopolis

Way back in the prolific filmography Steven Soderbergh (whose latest film, Unsane, is out on DVD this week), there’s the tiny Schizopolis (1996), his hilarious, endlessly creative mental breakdown of a vanity project. Full of ideas and self-amusement, It’s best imagined as Soderbergh’s sketch comedy show, as projected straight from his brain. The movie has no […]

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REVIEW: Not-Quite-Incredibles 2

When The Incredibles came out, in November 2004, it was Pixar’s sixth movie and only about the ninth superhero movie in the modern era (which archeologists agree started with X-Men in 2000). Focused more on adventure than comedy, with bar-raising computer animation and starring humans rather than toys, bugs, monsters, or fish, it was a departure for […]

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Rosemary’s Baby: Blueprint for Satanic Panic

Arguably the first mainstream American film to portray contemporary occultism in depth, Roman Polanski’s Rosemary’s Baby — released 50 years ago this month — premiered as a palpable fascination with the occult was taking hold. Based upon Ira Levin’s bestselling novel, various real-life occurrences surrounding the film added to its aura of evil, fueling fears that later […]

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