What’s the worst movie you’ve ever seen in theaters? What was your worst experience ever in the theater? Let me know your horror stories down in the comments! Posted byUncharted MediaJanuary 19, 2024Posted incomic book movies, comic books, comics, horror, horror movies, marvel, marvel ...
Search movie showtimes, find movie theaters near you, browse streaming movies, read movie reviews, and watch new movie trailers on Moviefone.
tracking all the movies we watch, rewatch and review. Late last year we started doing full text reviews here for movies seen in theaters, but a shorter review still appears on Letterboxd.
The storytelling and scenes are rather erratic in the first hour. I felt the effects scene weren’t enough to compensate for the drama, distrust and mania that transpired. But in the last 30 minutes, as is typical in effects-driven movies, the effects amp up. Deformed hands emerge from po...
Unnatural luck:It becomes fiction when a movie keeps showing the character with perfect hands all the time. Even if a player uses acasino bonus finderto get some of the best promotions, winning chances are still nowhere near what’s portrayed in movies. ...
The Lion King is such a large part of my childhood and in fact the first movie I ever saw in theaters. I could completely understand anyone putting The Lion King at slot number 1, but this is where it had to fall for me. From beginning to end, The Lion King is dazzling every time...
Almost 50 years on from that night, Jason Reitman (2021's Ghostbusters: Afterlife) delivers a wild, "inspired by true events" flick that tells the story of the 90 minutes leading up to the sketch/improv comedy series' first-ever showing. It's got a whole host of big names attached to...
First, let me give you an overview of film history. The first movie theaters in the United States were called nickelodeons. They were given this name because most admissions for a movie were only a nickel and "odeon" is the Greek word for theater. In June, 1905 the very first… 706...
I mentioned offhand that I was going to see the movie. My teacher, Sister Mary Helen, tried to talk me out of going. Mom and I waited on line as two showings sold out in front of us and still we waited and saw it. I vividly remember two young girls sitting right in front of ...
It's a short film about how rare life is. And how much we should appreciate the little moments that makes life joyful. And the film does that showing a tree that rarely has flowers. This footage was done in Brazil. And the drawings were done with acrylic paint, pen and Photoshop. And...