It's worth noting that the studio has given Tarantino the freedom to include R-rated content. Can you imagine The Hateful Eight in space? Sounds great as long as that big-headed bastard doesn't try to sneak the N-word in.
Monday, October 31, 2022
A New Hope for Star Trek?
It's worth noting that the studio has given Tarantino the freedom to include R-rated content. Can you imagine The Hateful Eight in space? Sounds great as long as that big-headed bastard doesn't try to sneak the N-word in.
Sunday, October 30, 2022
"Bram Stoker's Dracula" Review
by Daniel White
Saturday, October 29, 2022
Edward Norton's "Motherless Brooklyn" is a Good, Old-Fashioned Suspense Film
by John Zenoni
Friday, October 28, 2022
Leslie Jones Takes a Somewhat Hypocritical Stance on "Ghostbusters 3"
Thursday, October 27, 2022
Morgan Freeman's 7 Best Movies
6. Seven
3. Batman Begins
2. The Dark Knight
Wednesday, October 26, 2022
"Black Sunday" Review
by Daniel White
Tuesday, October 25, 2022
"The Oblong Box" Review
by Daniel White
Monday, October 24, 2022
Kevin Hart's 'What Now?' Movie Review
His last stand-up movie, Let Me Explain, featured stage effects akin to a rap or rock conert (i.e. flames shooting upwards from the stage floor) and boasted cameos by legendary rappers Method Man, Erick Sermon and Snoop.
This time around Hart opted to go the Hollywood route. A-list stars Don Cheadle and Halle Berry appear as themselves in a short, but not short enough, James Bond-like sequence which features Kevin as a cross between the British superspy and Denzel Washington's Robert McCall from The Equalizer. Unlike in his scripted movies, in which he's Ice Cube's or The Rock's bumbling sidekick, Hart is the action guy this time. No one who's followed Hart's career should be surprised. He's almost been leading up to this with his Nike commercials. Only now, Hart's the hero instead of Dwayne Wade. There's even a 007-style opening credits sequence.
The stand-up takes place in front of a live audience (of course) on a stage built inside of Philadelphia's Lincoln Financial Field (the Eagles' home stadium) with its 69,176-seat capacity. After rising from a hole in the stage floor, Hart hilariously opens up about a variety of aspects of his new life as an A-list comedian and family man. He covers a wide range of topics, from his usual relationship observations to being terrified of the wildlife near his home to resenting his kids' because of their terrible gift-giving skills to not knowing what to make of his son's suburban mannerisms. And of course, he again discusses his relationship with his father -- a staple of his comic routines. As usual, there are celebrities in attendance. It's not hard to spot fellow-comic Michael Blackson near the front.
In my opinion, a comedy is worth watching if it makes me laugh. And this one did. It's nowhere near as funny as his first special, 2009's I'm A Grown Little Man, named after his first tour, but it gets the job done. And it's much better than his BET series The Real Husbands of Hollywood.
With tears in his eyes, Kevin tells the crowd in his hometown (and mine) of Philly that he's made history by filling The Linc with 53,000 people for a stand-up comedy performance. That's an enormous step up from the 15,000-person crowd that watched him perform in 2011's Laugh At My Pain.
I guess the question now is: What Next?
Originally Posted 10/14/16
Sunday, October 23, 2022
"The Mummy" Review
by Daniel White
Saturday, October 22, 2022
"Count Dracula" Review
by Daniel White
Friday, October 21, 2022
"Dracula" Review
by Daniel White
Thursday, October 20, 2022
"Freedom on Fire: Ukraine's Fight for Freedom" Mini-Review
by John Zenoni
Wednesday, October 19, 2022
"The Crawling Hand" Review
by Daniel White
Tuesday, October 18, 2022
"The Revenge of Frankenstein" Review
by Daniel White
Monday, October 17, 2022
"Amsterdam" Review
by John Zenoni
Sunday, October 16, 2022
Joe Morton's 6 Best Movies
6. Ali
Morton's Chauncey Eskridge is one of the real-life attorneys hired to represent legendary boxer Muhammad Ali in his landmark case against the U.S. government, following his refusal to serve in the army during the Vietnam War. After appealing all the way to the Supreme Court, Eskridge's argument prevails and Ali's conviction as an alleged draft-dodger is overturned.
5. Executive Decision
Unquestionably the greatest of the many Die Hard rip-offs, Executive Decision centers on a U.S. Army intelligence consultant, backed up by a team of commandos, who infiltrate an airliner -- midflight -- in order to take down terrorists armed with a biological weapon. Morton portrays one of the commandos, U.S. Special Forces First Sergeant Campbell "Cappy" Matheny, the team's explosives expert. Following a serious injury, Cappy's forced to talk an aeronautics engineer through the process of disabling the terrorists' bomb.
4. American Gangster
Morton portrays Bumpy Johnson associate Charlie Williams, who, at his wake, hands a cash-filled envelope to the Harlem gangster's driver and successor, Frank Lucas. Subsequently, Williams remains an associate of Lucas throughout the heroin kingpin's career.
3. King of the Monsters
Yale-educated geologist Dr. Houston Brooks (Morton) is recruited by kaiju research company Monarch to study long-dormant prehistoric creatures initially detected because of his seismology work.
2. The Snyder Cut
Portraying another technologist, Xenoscientist Dr. Silas Stone's research into alien technology for the Department of Defense unlocks some of the secrets of an Apokolyptian Mother Box, the energy of which he harnesses to prolong the life of his badly-injured son, Victor. An unforeseen consequence of the machine's use is that it imbues the younger Stone with cybernetic enhancements, rendering him a cyborg, as well as granting him superhuman abilities.
Victor later rescues his father and other scientists following their abduction by intergalactic warlord Steppenwolf, alongside other meta-humans.
1. Batman v. Superman
Morton's Dr. Silas Stone makes his first appearance in a self-made video, obtained by Alexander Luthor and stolen by Bruce Wayne, documenting his son Victor's treatment.
Saturday, October 15, 2022
"Halloween Ends" Review
by Robert Zenoni
This….is Halloween Ends and it presumably is the final canon Halloween film to be made. This movie involves everything you wouldn’t want in a final iteration of such a classic film series. Let me back up and make something clear first. I HATE scary movies; I avoid them like the plague but this being the final movie to a series that scared me for months as a kid, it felt nostalgic almost to watch the final.
Now let’s get to it. This movie was…slightly disappointing. It introduces a new character that essentially becomes Michael and it just doesn’t make much sense. In fact, most of the movie doesn’t make much sense and even though it’s 2 hours long it STILL FEELS RUSHED. Everything about it feels like a Halloween movie except the plot point of an “extra” Michael Myers and that's really what kills the whole thing for me. We only got one scene where the iconic music is played -- which sucked -- and it just wasn’t scary (maybe that’s because I’m 26 now, not 8 ). And I just feel like Halloween is meant to be scary and not just a gore-and-kills movie. Overall, the ending was good and makes sense for an ending to the series. But it just lacked what the movie is about, which is just the thought that Michael is around the corner being suspenseful and none of that is present here. So I’ll close with, "Is this movie good?" No. Is it bad? No. It’s a solid ”Eh” and it further proves that the original is always the best.