The Horror genre has benefitted from something akin to a Renaissance in recent years; after James Wan’s seminal Conjuring films, more directors have challenged themselves to explore how this category of film can be reserved for more than just cheap jump scares.
“It is good writing for every character to clearly want something…but the way those characters bounced around in circles getting to those goals could be frustrating at times and slowed down the pace.” -Austin Casey
“Bohemian Rhapsody,” ironically unlike the song, seems to go through the motions in many respects and fails to tell its story in a way that is unique or satisfying to sit through.
This nostalgia-filled film seems to have struck a perfect chord with most critics and audiences too, as the film is “Certified Fresh” on Rotten Tomatoes and has accomplished a massive financial achievement in theaters nationwide.
A well-off but financially unstable thirty-something wants to impress his new fiancé after losing his cushy job by snagging an impressive new one but can’t do so due to one problem: he never graduated high school.
A young composer struggles to complete his magnum opus before his death. A hard-nosed journalist seeks to uncover the truth behind her source’s mysterious death. A synthetic clone yearns to see...
Intrigued by the popularity of Eastern spirituality in the United States, New Jersey filmmaker Vikram Gandhi began research for a yoga documentary. Instead of completing that project, Gandhi addressed...