Review: INSIDE
INSIDE is a handsome film that boasts a stellar Willem Dafoe performance, but is punishingly monotonous and filled with faux-profundity
CONTINUE READING
INSIDE is a handsome film that boasts a stellar Willem Dafoe performance, but is punishingly monotonous and filled with faux-profundity
CONTINUE READING
Michael B. Jordan’s directorial flourishes and Jonathan Majors’ striking performance make CREED III a satisfying ninth entry in the Rocky series
CONTINUE READING
Star Trek: Picard returns for it’s third season with “The Next Generation” and more of the same poor writing and stupid narrative decisions.
CONTINUE READING
KNOCK AT THE CABIN is M. Night Shyamalan’s best since SIGNS and features career best performances from Jonathan Groff and Dave Bautista
CONTINUE READING
THE FABELMANS is one of Spielberg’s most rich texts, printing the legend of his life while contemplating the exploitative nature of his art.
CONTINUE READING
An irritating Mark Rylance performance isn’t enough to ruin Luca Guadagnino’s road trip cannibal romance BONES AND ALL
CONTINUE READING
The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent is a serviceable metacomedy that serves as a tribute to one of our finest screen actors, Nicolas Cage.
CONTINUE READING
Mark Wahlberg’s unconvincing central performance and a baffling story structure ruin the well-meaning sentiment of JOE BELL
CONTINUE READING
ROADRUNNER: A FILM ABOUT ANTHONY BOURDAIN avoids being a hagiography of a complicated man, but slips into gross conjecture about his relationships and passing.
CONTINUE READING
Jason Statham and Guy Ritchie finally reunite after a decade and a half with the welcome 90s crime-drama throwback WRATH OF MAN
CONTINUE READING
Kevin reviews IN THE SAME BREATH, CENSOR, ON THE COUNT OF THREE, STRAWBERRY MANSION and KNOCKING from the first two days of the 2021 Sundance Film Festival
CONTINUE READING
SOUND OF METAL utilizes experimental sound design to amplify Riz Ahmed’s magnetic performance as a drummer suffering from permanent hearing loss
CONTINUE READING
Luke Greenfield’s HALF BROTHERS is a lazy, off putting road trip comedy that is as painfully unfunny as it is cloyingly sentimental
CONTINUE READING
Paul Bettany’s lead performance gives weight to Alan Ball’s UNCLE FRANK, which is otherwise a shallow, manipulative and caricatured film.
CONTINUE READING
THE LAST VERMEER fails to balance Guy Pearce’s enthralling, showy trial sequences with an inane investigation muddled by Claes Bang’s uninteresting lead.
CONTINUE READING
Kevin Costner and Diane Ladd are stellar in the western-riff LET HIM GO, which is a perfect showcase for their respective talents.
CONTINUE READING
The Glorias kicks off like basically every biopic, with a scene featuring the Oldest version of Gloria Steinem (played in this incarnation by Julianne Moore). The film then cuts back to her childhood upbringing, contrasting who she became with where she started. It’s a traditional framing that belies a far more unconventional vision that the film
CONTINUE READING
Miranda July’s KAJILLIONAIRE finds a perfect balance between Capital-Q Quirk, dark undercurrents and a genuine warmth and affection for its eccentric characters
CONTINUE READING
Words on Bathroom Walls has a lot to recommend. The performances are touching, it has a unique style that makes it feel fresher than these types of movies tend to be, and it has plenty of stylistic choices that really work. The script occasionally matches that cinematic verve and flair, but it can’t escape the YA romance genre’s narrative stranglehold.
CONTINUE READING
RADIOACTIVE attempts to celebrate the life and work of Marie Curie, but is merely a banal series of biopic clichés
CONTINUE READING
Auditioning for Farting Rick
Cinema Chance Cube goes to a snowed out cabin in Maine to fight off aliens and watch the Lawrence Kasdan film DREAMCATCHER
CONTINUE READING
Why Not Werewolves?
Filmmaker Jason Horton joins Kevin, Ryan and Shannon to discuss C.M. Talkington’s LOVE AND A .45
CONTINUE READING
COVID Has Turned Me Into a Weeb
Well hello there! Long time no see! Because I’m not exactly the most on-top-of-things, as you may have gathered from listening to the previous eleven episodes of Cinema Chance Cube, I forgot to do show notes for last week’s show. So lucky for you, we’re booking a double feature for you this time around: Michael
CONTINUE READING
Patrick Vollrath’s feature debut 7500 is another decent entry in the single-location subgenre of indie thrillers.
CONTINUE READING
Benevolent Cuckolding
The Cube determines that TOTAL RECALL is the next episode, so the boys get their asses to Mars and discuss Verhoeven and Schwarzenegger’s masterpiece.
CONTINUE READING
Andrew Patterson’s directorial debut, THE VAST OF NIGHT, is a clever sci-fi thriller that utilizes its 1950s setting to maximize the film’s feelings paranoia and isolation
CONTINUE READING
Dog Balls and Daddy Issues
Kevin, Ryan and Shannon are exposed to immense amounts of gamma radiation and bad dads with Ang Lee’s HULK
CONTINUE READING
"Smearing Chocolate on the Mona Lisa"
Fate decides the Cinema Chance Cube boys must watch the 1949 Carol Reed classic THE THIRD MAN, starring Joseph Cotten and Orson Welles!
CONTINUE READING
Mavis McGee joins the Cinema Chance Cube to discuss Sam Peckinpah’s THE GETAWAY
CONTINUE READING
Kevin loaded the Cinema Chance Cube with Shane Black’s THE NICE GUYS, which he, Ryan and Shannon agree is one of the best films of the past decade.
CONTINUE READING
The Cinema Chance Cube gents mambo their way into the world of DTV madness with the Albert Pyun film MEAN GUNS starring Christopher Lambert and Ice-T
CONTINUE READING
Kevin, Ryan and Shannon are a trio of soundmen trying to solve conspiracies and discuss Brian De Palma’s BLOW OUT on the latest episode of Cinema Chance Cube
CONTINUE READING
The Cinema Chance Cube boys are back to talk about François Truffaut’s French New Wave film SHOOT THE PIANO PLAYER
CONTINUE READING
The Cinema Chance Cube podcast returns with Kevin, Ryan and Shannon selling their souls to watch 2000’s BEDAZZLED
CONTINUE READING
Lewton Bus’s freshest podcast series Cinema Chance Cube kicks off with Kevin, Ryan and Shannon watching the 1990 Dolph Lundgren film I COME IN PEACE
CONTINUE READING
COVID-19 might have shut down most of 2020’s film landscape, but the year has still given us one masterpiece: Eliza HIttman’s NEVER RARELY SOMETIMES ALWAYS
CONTINUE READING
THE INVISIBLE MAN is a horrific tale of the effects our violent, male-centric society has on women by way of one of the Universal Classic Monsters
CONTINUE READING
Back again for another year, the Jeff Wells of Lewton Bus, Kevin Kuhlman, breaks down this year’s Academy Awards
CONTINUE READING
Sam Mendes’ long-take heavy 1917 is a thrill ride through the battlefields of World War I.
CONTINUE READING
THE RISE OF SKYWALKER, the latest STAR WARS film, suffers from incomprehensible plotting, a devout focus on inconsequential minutae and crippling nostalgia
CONTINUE READING
Daring and unafraid of pulling its punches, QUEEN & SLIM is a provocative, unsanitized work of art featuring star turns by Daniel Kaluuya and Jodie Turner-Smith
CONTINUE READING
Rian Johnson’s KNIVES OUT combines playful performances and witty writing to provide a wealthy abundance of laughs, fun, twists, and intrigue.
CONTINUE READING
FROZEN II is narratively ambitious and visually inventive, living up to its predecessor without being a mere retread, letting the past be in the past.
CONTINUE READING
LAST CHRISTMAS is a perfectly gentle, charming and breezy Christmas-themed rom-com, even despite its bad twist and off-tone digressions into darker themes.
CONTINUE READING
One of the year’s best films, MARRIAGE STORY features some of Noah Baumbach’s finest work as a writer/director and incredible leading performances from Adam Driver and Scarlett Johansson.
CONTINUE READING
Kasi Lemmons attempts to add weight and depth to the biopic formula with HARRIET to mixed results.
CONTINUE READING
With bad pop culture references and terminally inane musical interludes, THE ADDAMS FAMILY suffers from everything that is wrong with 21st century children’s entertainment
CONTINUE READING
WHERE’S MY ROY COHN, the documentary about the notorious attorney, is heavy on facts but light on insight into one of the 20th Century’s most destructive figures.
CONTINUE READING
Renée Zellweger’s performance does its best to elevate JUDY, but the film still cannot escape the clichés and banality of the musician biopic genre.
CONTINUE READING
Jillian Bell’s stellar, hilarious performance carries BRITTANY RUNS A MARATHON even when the film around her can’t always keep up
CONTINUE READING