Sitting comfortably alongside A Better Tomorrow and Hard Boiled as all-time action icon films, Woo’s seminal 1989 classic The Killer, starring Chow Yun Fat and Danny Lee, is to my mind the greatest film he’s ever made – arguments could easily be thrown about for any of the three ...
Killer Movie Reviews Behind the Scenes with Andrea Chase October 6, 2024 Andrea’s first actor interview ~ with Jerry Lewis Smart, but never stuffy, Andrea Chase takes no prisoners when reviewing films. In interviews, she draws out filmmakers by asking the questions others don’t think of, bu...
“The Kill Team,” writer/director Daniel Krauss’ dramatization ofactual wartime atrocitiesby U.S. soldiers in Afghanistan, is lean, sincere, impassioned filmmaking, yet it fails to leave as much of an impression as it clearly wants to. Part of the problem is that the movie, while focusing...
Don’t get me wrong.Killer Sofais noBed Of The DeadorRubber. At times, Rao evokes energies of a made-for-cable midnight flick within another film (the goofball movie within a movie vibe). Thing is, folds between scenery cushions hide more than just a simple “couch that eats people” ...
interviews SMILE 2: Actor Peter Jacobson on costarring in the Parker Finn directed new sequel – Exclusive » 10/26/2024 reviews Movie Review: VENOM: THE LAST DANCE » 10/25/2024 reviews Movie Review: MADS » 10/25/2024 reviews Movie Review: CONCLAVE » 10/25/2024 reviews Mo...
Edelstein, David
The cube is where Miles Willis (Jonathan Rosenthal) wakes up after being wounded during a skirmish in Iraq. There are no doors or windows, only the word “abandon” written upside-down high up on one of the walls. But wait. Soon the word “hope” joins it. And other odd scribblings ...
Killer Sofa, I have to say, was a surprisingly good film! I was expecting to either chuckle my way through this one or sleep through it. And while I didn’t chuckle, I’ll admit it did entertain me! The story is spot on as it doesn’t waste too much time getting into the action...
“Assault of the Killer Bimbos” is one of those movies where the lights are on but nobody’s at home. It is the most simpleminded movie in many a moon, a vacant and brainless exercise in dreck, and I almost enjoyed myself sometimes, sort of. The movie is so cheerfully dim-witted...
Wife, Mother, Murderer: Directed by Mel Damski. With Judith Light, David Ogden Stiers, Kellie Overbey, David Dukes. The life of Audrey Marie Hilley, who, in order to start a new life, took drastic action.