• Film Review – Corey Feldman vs. the World

    Nearly ten years ago, director Marcie Hume went on an adventure. Hired to capture the world of actor Corey Feldman, Hume was offered access to the subject’s life at a moment when his quest to become a music sensation was challenged by nationwide exposure to his actual gifts. In 2016, Feldman performed on the “Today” show with his band, Corey’s Angels, and it didn’t go well, but in his mind, all the publicity surrounding the appearance was a divine sign to keep going, to maintain the hunt for media supremacy, and doing so while surrounded by half-naked women playing their instruments. Hume was handed intimate access to the ensuing tour, and “Corey Feldman vs. the World” offers a look into an ego-heavy existence that almost defies description. Part cry for help, part “This is Spinal Tap,” the documentary is a wild ride of experiences and interviews with a wholly narcissistic man and his personal mission to maintain focus on himself while juggling a lot of self-imposed problems during his quest to stun the world with his message of positivity and sexploitation. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dreams

    In 2023, writer/director Michel Franco created one of the best films of the year in “Memory.” It was a haunting look at relationships and secrets, with the helmer creating tension and unusual tenderness in a strange central relationship, gifting stars Jessica Chastain and Peter Sarsgaard room to explore their characters and find interesting behaviors along the way. Chastain reunites with Franco for “Dreams,” which is also a study of human interaction and shadowed pasts, returning the actress and the filmmaker to a central crisis of odd devotion. “Dreams” isn’t nearly as engrossing as “Memory,” with Franco heading into Michael Haneke territory with the material, going slow-burn with this picture, which intends to be a disturbing study of power plays in a relationship between a Mexican dancer and his American lover. It’s not an extreme viewing experience, and not much of a dramatic one either, finding the material bordering on ridiculousness at times as the production searches for potency. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Dracula (2025)

    Embattled director Luc Besson attempted to revive some of his youthful filmmaking instincts with last year’s “June and John,” going micro-indie with a shot-on-phone production that was meant to be freewheeling, but was mostly insufferable. He returns to big-budget endeavors with “Dracula,” which, once again, offers the oft-told tale of a man who became a monster, hunting for love and facing those who wish to end his reign of terror. Besson (who also scripts) reunites with his “Dogman” star Caleb Landry Jones for this take on the world of author Bram Stoker, and the helmer also seems slightly obsessed with Francis Ford Coppola’s 1992 version of the tale (“Bram Stoker’s Dracula”), working with influences to fashion his own vision for creature appetites and monster hunting. There’s a love story as well, but, as with much of the picture, there’s little substance to enjoy as Besson attempts to go big and European with the offering, only to end up with a wearisome viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • The Worst Films of 2025

    Amy Schumer fakes a pregnancy, Kevin James and Alan Ritchson fake a comedy, Christmas blues with Michelle Pfeiffer, the Strangers return, Tyler Perry receives a free vacation, the Twisted Childhood Universe expands, Luc Besson goes micro-indie, an unfinished actioner, Popeye goes crazy, and Pete Davidson tries to act.

    These are the Worst Films of 2025

    (more…)
  • The Best Films of 2025

    A Toys “R” Us life of crime, a twisted take on Cinderella, the healing power of community, a doll-based senior care crisis, Spike Lee goes Kurosawa, Yaujta tales throughout time, a father’s pained awakening, the United States of Insanity, twins and their secrets, and the pure stress of motherhood.

    These are the Best Films of 2025.

    Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Anaconda (2025)

    Sony Pictures has certainly tried to keep the “Anaconda” franchise going over the last 28 years, greatly inspired by the surprising profitability of the original 1997 offering of monster horror and its semi-campy delivery. The film was a hit when nobody expected it to become one, creating opportunities for sequels, though only one (2004’s “Anacondas: The Hunt for the Blood Orchid”) was made for movie theaters. The corporation tries once again to get audiences excited about watching killer snake action, putting co-writer/director Tom Gormican (“The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent”) in charge of a “spiritual sequel” that plays with self-referential goofiness while also trying to work in some presentations of jungle adventure. The new “Anaconda” is meant to be silly, and it absolutely is, but it could definitely be a bit funnier as it goes about its winky business, often resembling a picture that was made up on the spot. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – We Bury the Dead

    “We Bury the Dead” has been often described as a zombie movie, and marketing efforts have certainly supported such a genre approach. There’s a form of the undead in the feature, but writer/director Zak Hilditch is after something a little more different with the picture, which primarily deals with unresolved business between people during a time of extraordinary crisis. “We Bury the Dead” isn’t going to scratch any zombie film itches, but if one relaxes expectations for unrelenting violence and gory events, there’s plenty here that’s interesting, especially when examining the characters and how they manage sudden trauma. Hilditch keeps the story relatively simple, and he has a capable cast to bring out a few potent scenes of introspection, with lead Daisy Ridley providing a fine turn as a person dealing with multiple layers of concern as she faces a dwindling sense of hope. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Where to Land

    Writer/director Hal Hartley returns to screens with “Where to Land,” which is his first picture since 2014’s “Ned Rifle.” While Hartley’s oeuvre has endured a bumpy ride at times, he was missed, with his specialized approach to indie filmmaking giving audiences a unique reminder of his creative voice and take on the world. “Where to Land” represents the helmer’s quest for self-inspection, following the tale of a tired director making contact with his past, present, and future as he attempts to assemble a last will and testament. “Where to Land” is classic Hartley, collecting a small community of characters to deal with an invented crisis, sold with snappy dialogue and terrific acting. It’s a return to form for Hartley, who manages concerns and mild comedy with confidence, making the endeavor a treat for those who’ve been following his career since it began. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Choral

    Nicholas Hytner hasn’t made a film in a decade, last seen on screens with “The Lady in the Van.” He’s not a director who works very often, and received some acclaim in the past, guiding such pictures as “The Madness of King George” and 2006’s “The History Boys.” “The Choral” is scripted by Alan Bennett, a longtime Hytner collaborator, and the duo concoct an extremely British endeavor about the grip of anxiety during World War I, and the soulful release of art during a troubling time. There are no surprises found in the offering, which plays like a mid-‘90s art-house release, providing a sense of comfort, musical performance, and wartime conflicts to best reach its target audience. Despite a general lack of electricity, “The Choral” is well-made and compellingly acted, periodically dipping into interesting areas of longing and loss while it tries to deliver reliable storytelling. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – Alpha

    Writer/director Julia Ducournau has built a career on provocative pictures, and while she doesn’t work often, she’s managed to capture attention with her first two features. 2016’s “Raw” stirred up film festival hype with its gruesome imagery, and 2021’s “Titane” turned Ducournau into a force of nature, delivering a wild examination of murder and sex that also burned brightly in pre-release circles. “Alpha” is her latest endeavor, and one can sense Ducournau struggling to produce something to compete with her previous work, looking to meet expectations with a surreal story of relationships and viral fears, returning to her love of body horror. “Raw” and “Titane” were bizarre offerings, but they remained interesting due to Ducournau’s strange ways and general storytelling fearlessness. “Alpha” doesn’t offer such a thrill, remaining limited in its emotional reach and characterization, making for a cold, sluggish viewing experience. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – H is for Hawk

    In 2014, author Helen Macdonald released her memoir, “H is for Hawk,” which explored an emotionally turbulent year for the woman, who handled the loss of her beloved father through the strange ways of falconry, giving her a unique distraction as she dealt with so much. Screenwriters Emma Donoghue and Philippa Lowthorpe (who also directs) elect to bring such an experience to the screen, dramatizing the roughness of Helen’s state of mind and her special relationship with a Eurasian goshawk. It’s the stuff of a television movie, but “H is for Hawk” tries to be a tad more sensitive about the character’s state of mind, giving actress Claire Foy room to feel around a rattled headspace while the writing explores relationships and acts of isolation. The feature offers an unusual partnership between a woman and her bird of prey, and emotional moments are mostly earned in the endeavor, which makes sense of the central crisis, frequently going deeper into memory to help strengthen its view of personal loss. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Testament of Ann Lee

    Just last year, partners Brady Corbet and Mona Fastvold collaborated on “The Brutalist,” attempting a tough sell as they created a nearly four-hour-long study of emotional ruin and suffering. They managed to pull off a minor hit with the picture (which Corbet directed), trying their luck again with “The Testament of Ann Lee,” which details the life and spiritual liberation of Ann Lee, the founder of the Shakers religious community. Fastvold takes the reins on this project, attempting to ease the imposing nature of the story but turning the film into a musical of some shape, also displaying plenty of dance to communicate the ways of faith and its direct connection to God. “The Testament of Ann Lee” isn’t particularly ambitious, and it’s not strongly paced, as Fastvold gets too caught up in the Broadway-style approach of the feature, out to make something theatrical, not insightful. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Strangers with Candy

    Created by Stephen Colbert, Paul Dinello, Mitch Rouse, and Amy Sedaris, “Strangers with Candy” was originally a television series that ran for three seasons on Comedy Central, ending in 2000. The show followed the adventures of Jerry, a former sex worker and addict, who elects to return to high school as a 46-year-old woman, using her prison instincts to help navigate a new world of challenges from staff and students. It was a cult program that never attracted much mainstream attention, but it developed a loyal audience, and perhaps one that was deeply saddened by the eventual cancellation of the series. 2006’s “Strangers with Candy” is a feature-film revival of the show, putting star Amy Sedaris back in charge as Jerri, with the endeavor going the prequel route, detailing how the character moved from the big house to high school hallways. Directed by Dinello, and scripted by Sedaris, Colbert, and Dinello, “Strangers with Candy” is an amusing ride with a new R-rated upgrade, though there’s definitely a limit when it comes to the appeal of the material’s zaniness. Even with a short run time, the movie can feel a little long, especially when it pursues weaker subplots and ideas. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Queens of Drama

    Alexis Langlois makes their feature-length directorial debut with “Queens of Drama,” and they’re not taking the assignment lightly. While working with a small budget, the filmmaker is aiming to make every moment count in the movie, which is an operatic take on the grind of fame, pop music, and relationships, playing around with the details of Britney Spears’s life. Langlois goes artful and campy in the endeavor, and they ask a lot of viewers by pushing the run time to nearly two hours of excess. However, “Queens of Drama” is creatively made and certainly committed to the cause, supported by Langlois’s hyper-specific vision for the picture, which retains a defined creative fingerprint. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Rust

    In 2021, cinematographer Halyna Hutchins was killed on the set of “Rust,” shot with a loaded weapon in a horrible accident that sent shockwaves throughout the film industry. There’s been headline news, lawsuits, and even a crude documentary released just month (“Last Take”), and now, surprisingly, there’s an actual feature. Cast and crew set out to complete the movie years after Hutchins’s death, a production push eerily reminiscent of 1994’s “The Crow,” which also carried on after a tragic loss. Now a completed picture, “Rust” makes it to release, hoping to offer cinematic artistry and a thought-provoking story, as writer/director Joel Souza endeavors to realize his vision for a decidedly “Unforgiven”-esque tale of violence and the corrosive effects of such living on those who choose darkness. There are obvious challenges when watching the effort, especially getting past its real- world horror, but Souza also doesn’t make a very compelling offering, taking an exceptionally long time (140 minutes) to stew in mental illness, which doesn’t hold much dramatic power. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Blu-ray Review – Scarecrow in a Garden of Cucumbers

    Holly Woodlawn is best known as a Warhol Superstar, making a name for herself with acting assignments in 1970’s “Trash” and 1971’s “Women in Revolt.” 1972’s “Scarecrow in a Garden of Cucumbers” plays like a career move from the actress, who goes from Warhol’s control to her own starring vehicle in the picture, handed ample opportunity to display screen charms and comedic timing. Director Robert J. Kaplan doesn’t really have a complete film with “Scarecrow in a Garden of Cucumbers,” but there’s a lively cast ready to play with behavioral weirdness and New York City eccentricity in the endeavor, which gets as far as possible on oddity and extremity before it starts to feel borderline incomplete. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Housemaid

    “The Housemaid” is an adaptation of a 2022 book by Frieda McFadden, who’s been cranking out novels and stories for roughly the last decade. She found major success with the title, and Hollywood came running, as tales of horrible people doing horrible things is big business, especially when it deals with toxic relationships (“Fifty Shades of Grey,” “It Ends with Us”) and questionable messages of empowerment. Paul Feig directs the endeavor, having already guided a similar project to box office success (2018’s “A Simple Favor”), and he’s tasked with delivering a twisty thriller highlighting unstable characters and strange decision-making skills. “The Housemaid” is a beach read that’s found its way to the big screen, offering viewers a questionable study of survival that’s weighed down by uneven acting and a lack of sharp editing, making for a long sit as concepts that probably made sense on the page seem quite ludicrous on film. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants

    If you’re a fan of anything SpongeBob SquarePants, there’s been a lot of viewing options in recent years. A resurgence of sorts has occurred for the animated world, with new shows appearing and spin-off films released. Earlier in 2025, “Plankton: The Movie” was issued as a streaming title, and the producers aren’t taking a break, trying their luck again on the big screen with “The SpongeBob Movie: Search for SquarePants,” which restores focus on the main characters and their eternal battle with aquatic adventure and stupidity. Director Derek Drymon and screenwriters Pam Brady and Matt Lieberman have one job to do: keep it silly and moving. The production team mostly accomplishes this mission, with “Search for SquarePants” fun and colorful, delivering needed wackiness and cartoon antics, improving on 2021’s “Sponge on the Run” with a fresh round of goofiness and more pirate-y happenings. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com

  • Film Review – The Great Flood

    “The Great Flood” has the initial appearance of a traditional disaster movie. There’s a massive global event that triggers a major emergency situation for the characters, as rising waters and numerous tsunamis chase the personalities as they make their way up a large apartment building. Writer/director Byung-woo Kim is certainly inspired by other hits in the subgenre, creating a frightful screen emergency that delivers on unusual survival sequences. However, “The Great Flood” isn’t strictly interested in generating pulse-pounding entertainment with a terrifying situation of planetary extinction. There’s more, much more, to the screenplay than cheap thrills, and it’s debatable if sizable turns of plot actually work for the endeavor or simply overstuff it with needless extensions of concern. It remains an active feature with committed performances, and the helmer is absolutely looking to comment on the future of our shared technological experience. However, after about an hour of near-misses and panic, a good case for simplicity in spectacle is made, finding the offering a bit too knotted for its own good. Read the rest at Blu-ray.com