Family Oscar Parties 2011 (News and Views, Last Update Jul 2017)
You - Raising Your Child (News and Views, Last Update Feb 2011)
Hoodwinked!
Hoodwinked! (Movie Reviews, Last Update Apr 2020)
Who stole the cookie from the cookie jar? Was it Red (voice by Anne Hathaway), The Wolf (Patrick Warburton), The Woodsman (James Belushi) or Granny (Glenn Close)? This computer-animated spoof of Little Red Riding Hood bakes up a quadruple serving of suspects and perspectives.
Unstoppable
Unstoppable (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2016)
A runaway loaded with toxic cargo is headed straight for a heavily populated area. Understanding the risks to the public, two railway employees (played by Denzel Washington and Chris Pine) ignore their own safety and attempt to halt the unstoppable locomotive.
Close Encounters Of The Third Kind
Close Encounters Of The Third Kind (Movie Reviews, Last Update Sep 2017)
After Roy Neary (Richard Dreyfuss) experiences a strange, close encounter (of a third kind) with an UFO, he is left with an oddly burned face and an unexplainable obsession for a peculiar shape.
My Soul to Take
My Soul to Take (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2016)
Director Wes Craven dishes up his usual horror fare in this flick about a serial killer determined to kill seven children who share the same birthday, which also marks the anniversary of a significant event in the murder's life.
Paranormal Activity 2
Paranormal Activity 2 (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2016)
Picking up where the first movie left off, this production promises more low-budget paranormal activity.
It’s Kind of a Funny Story
It’s Kind of a Funny Story (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2016)
A teenager (Keir Gilchrist) suffering from depression is placed in an adult psychiatric ward where he gets dubious advice from fellow patients (Zach Galifianakis and Emma Roberts).
You Again
You Again (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2017)
Marni (Kristen Bell) thinks her bad high school memories were left far behind until she discovers her brother (Jimmy Wolk) is engaged to the bully (Odette Yustman) who made those years so unbearable. Her mother (Jamie Lee Curtis) attempts to help her forgive the past until she also meets an old enemy (Sigourney Weaver).
Life As We Know It
Life As We Know It (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2017)
Holly Benson (Katherine Heigl) and Eric Messer (Josh Duhamel) hardly know each other, but they each agree to become the godparents of their mutual friends' daughter. However the two are thrown together after a tragic accident leaves the little girl an orphan, and Holly and Eric learn they have been named her co-guardians.
Frankie and Alice
Frankie and Alice (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2017)
Halle Berry plays a Black go-go dancer in the 1970s who struggles with multiple personality disorder, including one of her alters which is a Southern white racist.
Sanctum
Sanctum (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2017)
An exploratory venture into an uncharted cave turns treacherous when a tropical storm hits, trapping a team of climbers inside. With supplies running low, the group is forced to find a new exit or suffer a watery death.
Monsters
Monsters (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2016)
After the crash landing of a NASA probe, Central America is quarantined because of contamination by alien life forms. Six years later photojournalist Andrew Kaulder (Scoot McNairy) is sent to investigate these "monsters." He is also asked to track down his boss's daughter (Whitney Able) and escort her safely back to America.
Conviction
Conviction (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2016)
Betty Anne Waters (Hillary Swank) is convinced her brother (Sam Rockwell) has been convicted of a crime he did not commit. In order to clear his name, the single mother decides to become a lawyer and defend his case -- even if doing so may take close to 20 years.
Never Let Me Go
Never Let Me Go (Movie Reviews, Last Update Jul 2016)
Ruth (Keira Knightley), Kathy (Carey Mulligan), and Tommy (Andrew Garfield) have become best friends as they have grown up together in an idyllic British boarding school. But as they approach adulthood, the trio will have to face the sobering reality of the dystopian world around them.