Initially slated to hit theatres way back in 2019, clearly, some things are not worth waiting for.
Baz Luhrmann’s ‘Elvis’ is coming to the big screen and it has all the hip-swinging, rock-and-roll intensity that helped propel the superstar to fame.
The same director who made Ryan Reynolds that beefed-up character in ‘Free Guy’ is bringing us something new.
A proudly South African aircraft will be flying high in the upcoming action film starring Sandra Bullock, Brad Pitt, Channing Tatum, and Daniel Radcliffe.
Netflix’s ‘Power Of The Dog’ landed a very solid 12 nominations, while there were surprise snubs for Lady Gaga and ‘House of Gucci’.
Kenneth Branagh’s murder mystery, ‘Death on the Nile’, has not one, but three actors steeped in scandal ahead of Friday’s release.
Netflix is releasing a wide range of original films in 2022 and to whet your appetite there’s a single teaser trailer that features 28 of them.
Leatherface is back to his murderous ways and there is no cancelling him, no matter how many phones you hold up to record him ripping you to shreds.
Would you look at that? It’s Friday already. Another week is almost done and dusted so high fives all around.
The 1999 cult classic ends with a strong ant-consumerism message, unless you happen to watch the version just released in China.
This masterful tale with Macedonian roots and creative-horror tinges follows a shape-shifting witch trying to figure out what it is to be human.
Focused on the parents of a murdered schoolboy sitting down with the parents of his teenage killer, ‘Mass’ is overflowing with astonishingly raw and nuanced emotion.
Stitched up in a “snazzy white suit and a whole lot of violence”, Oscar Isaac shows us what can happen if you lean into your insomnia and the chaos that follows.
Complete with horrendous customers, impossible managers, and sorry-for-themselves staff, the drama that unfolds in this kitchen-set feels exactly like an accelerating panic attack.
To those of you marooned at your desk, be it in the office or at home, we soldier on with 2022’s first Friday trailer perusal.
The last time the Jackass crew ‘graced’ the big screen was back in 2010 with ‘Jackass 3D’. I guess they’ve had more than a decade to come up with exciting ways to hurt their pals.
Last year at least, Netflix managed to create a number of excellent original movies, some of which are likely to be Oscar nominees.
That’s right – the time has arrived for us to part ways until January. This list, our final of the year, covers the best documentaries released during 2021.
I wouldn’t go so far as to say that the past year has been entertaining, but we sure did get a hell of a lot of entertainment to distract ourselves with.
HBO’s ‘Succession’ is at the top of all the television shows with five nominations, while Apple’s ‘Ted Lasso’ and ‘The Morning Show’ didn’t do too badly with four nods each.
When we first heard about ‘Don’t Look Up’, featuring a laundry list of Hollywood heavyweights, we had high hopes.
Time to get your perusal on. Spoiler alert – there’s actually a fourth trailer in this one but let’s not get ahead of ourselves.
Taking out those better-known blockbusters, as well as award-winning masterpieces like ‘Minari’, ‘Nomadland’, and ‘Judas and the Black Messiah’, we’ve settled on five films.
These films may not be widely spoken about or acknowledged, having flown under the radar, but they are still remarkable.
Steven Spielberg’s adaptation of the 1957 Broadway musical, ‘West Side Story’, has received stellar reviews thus far.
Warner Bros. has released yet another trailer for ‘The Matrix Resurrections’, one that is promising a little “Déjà Vu”.
‘Mr Bones’, released in 2001, smashed domestic box office records so naturally, this horse is being flogged.
Lady Gaga and Adam Driver have come out on top in this ‘House of Gucci’ film review, while the acting chops of Jared Leto and Al Pacino were cut down to size.
Tom Hanks is a Hollywood cultural icon, having starred in some of the best and most recognisable movies of the past four decades.
The prologue video released by Universal Pictures begins by travelling back 65 million years to the age of the dinosaurs.