Tag Archives: cinema

Omaha Review

Omaha

  • Director: Cole Webley
  • Writer: Robert Machoian
  • Starring: John Magaro, Molly Bell Wright, Wyatt Solis, Talia Balsam, Emma Keifer, Teo Santos

Grade: B

Those who follow the Sundance Film Festival regularly know that it attracts a certain type of indie film with recurring sensibilities. I’d never profess to be a long-standing expert on this phenomenon, but Cole Webley’s Omaha (which premiered at Sundance in 2025 and will soon be in theaters nationwide) plays as an emblematic example of what the festival does best, for better or worse. That is, a portrait of a hard-up family or individual scraping by, probably somewhere in rural or small-town America, as they’re faced with external or existential adversities – with some sad indie guitar music peppered in for flavor. Webley’s film is exactly that, a road trip focused on a family as they move from their foreclosed home to the titular Nebraska city.

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Blue Heron Review

Blue Heron

  • Director: Sophy Romvari
  • Writer: Sophy Romvari
  • Starring: Eylul Guven, Iringó Réti, Ádám Tompa, Edik Beddoes, Amy Zimmer, Liam Serg, Preston Drabble, Lucy Turnbull, Jecca Beauchamp

Grade: B+

How could this have been prevented? It’s frequently one of the first questions asked once tragedy strikes, and it’s one that Blue Heron, the stunningly assured debut feature from writer-director Sophy Romvari, wrestles with. There are elements of the film that are autobiographical to Romvari’s life, accentuated by specificities which feel like they were plucked from her memories. But its greatest triumph is in not feeling so isolated, as if anyone can find something relatable within its story.

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Thrash Movie Review

Thrash

  • Director: Tommy Wirkola
  • Writer: Tommy Wirkola
  • Starring: Phoebe Dynevor, Whitney Peak, Djimon Hounsou, Gemma Dart, Alyla Browne, Dante Ubaldi, Stacy Clausen, Elijah Ungvary, Amy Mathews

Grade: C-

From its opening introductory text regarding the increasing frequency of intense hurricanes, Thrash – now streaming on Netflix – presents its thesis as a grand metaphor for climate change and its potentially unintended consequences. Of course, it’s nothing new for horror/thriller films to throw in a political or social message through varying degrees of subtlety, but writer-director Tommy Wirkola clues us in right off the bat regarding where his film’s priorities lie. Fortunately the film doesn’t always feel like a glorified PSA throughout its entire runtime, a la Don’t Look Up. Rather, as the film goes on, the climate change metaphor takes a back seat to shark mayhem, to varying degrees of success.

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The Super Mario Galaxy Movie Review

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie

  • Director: Aaron Horvath, Michael Jelenic
  • Writer: Matthew Fogel
  • Starring: Chris Pratt, Anya Taylor-Joy, Jack Black, Benny Safdie, Charlie Day, Brie Larson, Glen Powell

Grade: D

The Super Mario Galaxy Movie serves as more proof that, according to the Hollywood machine, if it ain’t broke, don’t fix it. In 2023, when The Super Mario Bros. Movie grossed over 1 billion dollars worldwide in spite of mostly negative critical reactions, the folks at Universal, Illumination, and Nintendo decided not to look inward and seek to find the beating hearts of its titular plumber-heroes. Rather, its sequel gives fans more of the same empty calories they so desperately crave.

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Reminders of Him Review

Reminders of Him

  • Director: Vanessa Caswill
  • Writers: Colleen Hoover, Lauren Levine
  • Starring: Maika Monroe, Tyriq Withers, Rudy Pankow, Lauren Graham, Bradley Whitford

Grade: D

Colleen Hoover has been a staple in the fiction book community, but has since made her way into the film industry. With It Ends with Us and Regretting You being major box office successes, it looks like Hoover’s work will continue to be adapted to feature films, leading to the release of Reminders of Him. While the film maintains the rom-dram elements that makes Hoover such a popular author, it falls under the trapping of her previous film adaptations.

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undertone Review

undertone

  • Director: Ian Tuason
  • Writer: Ian Tuason
  • Starring: Nina Kiri, Adam DiMarco, Michèle Duquet

Grade: C

A24’s latest horror flick undertone puts a new twist on screen-life horror: instead of playing out the story via windows on a computer screen, the terrors in the film unfurl through a series of podcast sessions. Evy and Justin (played by Nina Kiri and The White Lotus’s Adam DiMarco) cohost a podcast dissecting paranormal events. When they begin to dive into a series of ten audio files sent by a mystery contributor, things start to shift in the home Evy shares with her ill mother (Michèle Duquet). Unfortunately, the story that follows is messy and cliched, failing to live up to the inventive horror films A24 is often known for putting out.

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Project Hail Mary Review

Project Hail Mary

  • Director: Phil Lord, Christopher Miller
  • Writer: Drew Goddard
  • Starring: Ryan Gosling, Sandra Huller, Lionel Boyce, Ken Leung, Milana Vayntrub

Grade: A-

“Project Hail Mary” is a highly renowned book not only because of the vast popularity of Andy Weir, but because of how people connect with the story and its themes. Because of this, a film adaptation would have a lot to live up to. Even though films like The Martian proved that Weir’s stories adapt easily to the big screen, the ability to please fans of the original source material as well as bring in a new audience is a daunting task. Luckily, directors Phil Lord and Christopher Miller and writer Drew Goddard proved to be the right ones to take on the project, with what will likely be one of the biggest movies of 2026.

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Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die Review

Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die

  • Director: Gore Verbinski
  • Writer: Matthew Robinson
  • Starring: Sam Rockwell, Zazie Beetz, Haley Lu Richardson, Michael Peña, Juno Temple, Dino Fetscher, Georgia Goodman, Dominique Maher, Ethan Saunders

Grade: B+

Between Sam Raimi and Gore Verbinski, the start of 2026 is bringing back the filmmakers of some of the biggest movies of the 2000s to make bold new original movies. In Verbinski’s case, he hasn’t actually made a movie in nine years with the little-seen, albeit big-budget, gothic horror film A Cure for Wellness. While Raimi got the big studio treatment courtesy of Disney’s 20th Century Studios, Verbinski’s latest, the ambitious sci-fi action comedy Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die, doesn’t have the same kind of budget or bigwig Hollywood backing.

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The President’s Cake Review

The President’s Cake

  • Director: Hasan Hadi
  • Writer: Hasan Hadi
  • Starring: Banin Ahmad Nayef, Sajad Mohamad Qasem, Waheed Thabet Khreibat, Rahim AlHaj, Muthanna Malaghi

Grade: B+

Life under a dictatorship has a range of consequences, both intended and unintended. The President’s Cake, the directorial debut from Hasan Hadi, explores the oft-ignored economic effect of life under the Saddam Hussein regime in the 1990s, but it tells a universal story that can be felt beyond the specific place and time. It’s a quietly radical experiment, eschewing a traditional story structure to make a larger point about governmental control and how it affects the innocent.

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Shelter Review

Shelter

  • Director: Ric Roman Waugh
  • Writer: Ward Parry
  • Starring: Jason Statham, Bodhi Rae Breathnach, Bill Nighy, Harriet Walter, Naomi Ackie

Grade: C

For the past few years, the early months have graced audiences with the latest Jason Statham action vehicle. With films like The Beekeeper and A Working Man breaking the box office by grossing more than double their budgets worldwide, it shows that the world is not yet done with him. The latest film hoping to join Statham’s string of box office successes is Shelter, a redundant yet competently made action film.

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