This Spike Lee joint is one of the year’s best.
All in Screen Nation
This Spike Lee joint is one of the year’s best.
Living Universe is a beautiful, intriguing and mind-blowing documentary imagining the perilous first mission to a planet outside our solar system and the search for alien life in our universe.
Amid the dead air and amateurish production, I could vaguely sense where The Breaker Upperers humour was coming from, and it’s certainly a refreshing perspective. You want to like it because it's so desperate to please and to make you laugh.
If there’s any reason to see this, it’s for Jon Hamm.
Mamma Mia! Here We Go Again might be lacking in the plot department, but that doesn’t stop it from being an entertaining film and a must for any musical fan.
It’s a The Rock movie.
The annual Scandinavian Film Fest is back in a big way with this wonderful Norwegian/Pakistani tale.
An incredible debut feature that heralds a genuine talent, BUGS follows a group of teenagers at high school as they plan their weekend and jostle for position in the complex hierarchy of teenage social networks.
An anti-action action film.
Before “Three Billboards Outside Ebbing, Missouri”, there was “In Bruges”.
An interview with Greg Sestero, of The Room, The Disaster Artist, and now, Best F(r)iends, fame.
A recap of Tanaya Harper’s EP launch at Rhubarb Records with Stella Donnelly, Lauren M O’Hara, Sam Rocchi and Grace Sanders.
Is it a cliche to say that this movie is the perfect chaser to Infinity War’s fantasy opera? So be it. It is.
Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom makes a go of running on fumes, with only sound and fury in abundance.
It's not Mr Incredible’s brute strength that heaves the gargantuan expectations off the film's shoulders. It is Elastigirl who stretches through every nitpick and takes centre stage.
This episode on the Spoiler Nation Podcast, we dissect Han Solo’s origin in Solo: A Star Wars Story. But first, a spoiler-filled review of the ultra-meta Deadpool 2.
We interview Timothy Green and Samantha Nerida, the dynamic duo behind “Tissue”
I’ve been sleeping with the lights on after watching Hereditary.
A true crime masterpiece.
Upgrade has no pretensions about pushing the sci-fi genre forward, and yet it totally succeeds as a pulpy little thriller with a few tricks up its sleeve.