
Whatever the reason, What’s the Story, Wishbone? functions as both a celebration and a time machine. It reminds us of afternoons spent sprawled on living-room
Those ideas may sound quaint in 2026, which is precisely why they feel revolutionary. We live in an age addicted to cynicism. Catastrophe has become
When the credits rolled, I felt the same exhilaration I used to feel leaving action movies as a teenager. I was slightly exhausted, mildly deaf,
Watching Is God Is feels like being promised a handmade meal by a celebrated chef and instead receiving an expired Lunchable thrown directly at your
By the end, Lee Cronin’s The Mummy doesn’t just revive an old monster, it drags the entire Universal Monsters catalogue into a dark alley, kicks
By the end, you may not have answers. You will, however, have a lingering sense that art, like friendship and like love, is a living
The Drama is, in the end, a kind of Trojan horse. It’s a love story that smuggles in a far more disquieting question about who
In the end, Project Hail Mary doesn’t quite stick the landing, though it tries valiantly. Several times. What it delivers instead is something gentler. It’s

