Film Review: A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon (2019)
byThe current headliner of the Aardman Animations Studio is the raucous A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon. This is the lamb’s second foray onto the…
The current headliner of the Aardman Animations Studio is the raucous A Shaun the Sheep Movie: Farmageddon. This is the lamb’s second foray onto the…
Following the 1937 original, and two further remakes starring Judy Garland in 1954 and Barbra Streisand in 1976, the current version of A Star…
With Easter around the corner, it’s only fair that we get to watch a film tribute to Easter eggs. I’m talking about the pop…
There is generally always some friction between governments and the media. In recent times, nowhere has this escalated more quickly than in the United…
Spielberg is a virtuoso of inclusive ‘big’ cinema. His broad demographic appeal spans all ages. While adult stories have been his focus of late,…
Equal parts exciting, amusing, frightening and spectacular, this is how it’s done. Go and see it on the big screen because the television doesn’t do it justice.
In the prologue to Susan Lacy‘s American Masters special Inventing David Geffen, the man in question speaks about creating a life and an idea…
Daniel Day-Lewis has once again created another legendary performance, embodying Lincoln with tremendous grace and tenderness. Day-Lewis intensely inhabits the character most impressively with his voice, rarely raised above a calm and collected tone. Though no recordings of Lincoln’s voice existed – having died a short time before Edison’s phonograph was invented – it feels safe to say that Day-Lewis nails it.
Following in the steps of Inglourious Basterds, cinematic master Quentin Tarantino loudly returns with the revisionist Django Unchained.
Following in the guise of the popular network musical series, NBC’s Smash sets out to appeal to a similar audience.