Despite some problems, director Kenneth Branagh's "Death on the Nile" plays as a well-crafted travelogue that happens to have a reasonably engaging murder mystery at its center.
Enter here for your chance to win a family-four pack of Fandango tickets to see DEATH ON THE NILE starring Kenneth Branagh, Gal Gadot, and Armie Hammer.
"On the Basis of Sex" covers Supreme Court Associate Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg’s (played by Felicity Jones) life from law school through the first several years of her career. This period marks the onset of her decades-long (and arguably ongoing) fight for civil rights and the advancement of gender equality.
Enter here for your chance to win a pair of passes to an advance screening of the new film, SORRY TO BOTHER YOU. For your chance to receive a pair of complimentary passes to see the new film SORRY TO BOTHER YOU from writer/director Boots Riler at the Maple Theater in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan on Tuesday, July 10th at 7:00 PM, just look for the “Enter the Contest” box further down on t...[Read More]
The Birth of a Nation is so heart-wrenchingly moving. A biography of the emancipation movement that began with Nate Turner, slave and preacher, a character played brilliantly by writer/director Nate Parker. The story begins in the antebellum South in 1809. Nate as a very young man is thought to be a leader that will do great things, having some unique marks that was felt only a leader would have. ...[Read More]
This late summer film, The Man from U.N.C.L.E. is inspired by the 1964-68 television series. Director Guy Ritchie’s take on the international spy team is surprisingly great! This is a quick-witted, not without some well-timed sarcasm, blast back into the 1960s world of the secret agent. Henry Cavill is brilliant As CIA agent Napoleon Solo. Solo is a former thief that is paying his debt to the U.S....[Read More]
Mirror Mirror is a spectacular movie! Every minute of it was great. I really liked it because there are a lot of cool, exciting, and emotional parts. I like how the story is a mixed-up version of the Snow White fairytale with a twist.
Clint Eastwood’s biopic of the innovative, paranoid lawman who became as notorious as the criminals he hunted as the first Director of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, J. Edgar is a modest chamber drama that doesn’t offer its audience many of the comforts of the usual Hollywood historical epics – Eastwood’s whispering piano score and a monochromatic look that almost appears black-and-white in ...[Read More]