Category: Reviews
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Indigenous peoples, the deaf community and Marvel fans should all celebrate ECHO

Whether it’s one of the best fight scenes in MCU miniseries history, the creative directing to let the audience feel how a deaf Maya experiences the world or the authenticity of the portrayal of the Choctaw people, Echo is everything you could hope for.
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REVIEW: Migration (2023)

While logically Mack is the main character, a case could be made that adventure is actually the main character here.
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REVIEW: Aquaman and The Lost Kingdom (2023)

The only reason this isn’t the worst movie of 2023 is because Momoa is so easy to root for.
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REVIEW: The Zone of Interest (2023)

The film is interesting, heartbreaking and extremely uncomfortable. For a project where traditional storytelling is seemingly absent, that’s pretty impressive.
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REVIEW: Milli Vanilli (2023)

Director Luke Korem does a great job making you feel, at any given moment, the joy, the guilt, the tension or the pain of the ordeal.
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REVIEW: Michael Jackson – Thriller 40 (2023)

Having sold an estimated 70 million copies to date, Michael Jackson’s Thriller turned 40 last year. In celebration of the album that changed music back in 1982, Director Nelson George sat down with multiple experts, insiders and historians to chronicle the making of the best selling album of all-time. The audience is super-served insight from…
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REVIEW: A Haunting in Venice (2023)

If you like the whodunit genre, A Haunting in Venice is right up your alley. It’s also nothing you haven’t seen before.
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REVIEW: Trolls Band Together (2023)

While “hate listening” — it’s a thing — to an old BroZone album, Branch (voiced by Justin Timberlake) finds himself reminiscing about his long lost brothers. Poppy (Anna Kendrick) bursts in and tells him she used to love BroZone, having no idea that her boyfriend is a former member. Fast forward to Bridget and King…
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REVIEW: The Hunger Games – The Ballad of Songbirds & Snakes (2023)

“If you love the originals, this will only stoke your Hunger Games fire. But if you’ve never seen the originals, you can still take it in as a stand-alone film and really enjoy yourself.”
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REVIEW: The Marsh King’s Daughter (2023)

Every once in a while a film comes along and a performance is so good that you can’t imagine anyone else in the role. Daisy Ridley fits that bill here.
