The mask scary to think next year it's 25 years old and marked the debut of a very young cameron diaz just a pity the second one didn't involve her nor jim carrey plus going into animation
A documentary from Catherine Lurie and narrated by Jason Isaacs that follows a group of Jewish bikers as they ride from Tel Aviv to Berlin for the 2015 Maccabi Games.Incredibly emotional scenes ensue as the riders share stories and attempt to connect with their ancestors amidst all the heartbreaking archive footage.
A pretty effective comedy horror that centres on a group of commuters stranded at an isolated train station.It offers genuine high jinks and scares in places as well as boasting an impressive that included legendary comic Arthur Askey,Kathleen Harrison and Richard Murdoch.
An offbeat and unsettling period horror set in 19th Century America. During the United States - Mexican War, a starving man arrives at a military outpost with a disturbing tale of murder and cannibalism. The movie gained quite a cult following thanks to it's off the cuff dark humour. Some of the dialogue is on the corny side but still somehow remains essential to the movie's theme, thanks in large part to top drawer performances from the lead actors. Robert Carlyle and Guy Pearce excel as the leads, with good supporting roles coming from Jeffrey Jones, Jeremy Davies, Neal McDonagh and the late John Spencer. There's a very distinctive and well written soundtrack from Blur frontman Damon Albarn too. 3.5 / 5
Kind of like a cross between Shaun of the Dead and High School Musical that somehow manages to work,for the most part anyway.The story takes place in Scotland during a zombie outbreak as Anna played brilliantly by Ella Hunt,along with her friends sing and dance through the horrors of being besieged by the undead.It drags towards the end but the plucky heroine character is worth the investment as is the headmaster played by Paul Kaye.
After recently watching bits of "Justice League", "Batman : The Dark Knight Rises" and some other pointless Superman remake, it left me idly wondering about the economics of these comic universes and how on earth anybody ordinary in these cities is supposed to be able to get a mortgage or homes and contents insurance : the collateral damage inflicted by these superhero guardians is wantonly over-the-top.
Yet film after film, the skyscrapers are miraculously resurrected shiny and new, ready for the next catastrophic battering. When by rights they should be being shown getting progressively more and more devastated and uninhabitable film after film.
How on earth is this managed ?
Presumably the superheroes have some contractual obligation to rebuild everything double-quick time between galactic emergencies as compensation ?
This is just what you'd expect from a Mission Impossible movie!, The action sequences are good and all the cast put in good turns. Some of the scenes in this franchise in the past have involved Tom Cruise doing some of his own stunts, which are pretty impressive considering in the past M.I. movies, like in Ghost Protocol when he's scaling the Burj Khalifa (Khalifa Tower) in Dubai at 829.84m (2,723 ft) and Rogue Nation in the opening scene when he's hanging off the side of an Airbus A400M as it takes off, well he does the same in some of the scenes in this one, which are just as impressive. Overall it is a good action movie and I'd like to see another return of Ethan Hunt and his crew. 8/10.
An effective noir thriller that follows a young widow who in her grief,coordinates her own investigation alongside the authorities in order to bring her husband's killer to justice.Well acted with some nice plot twists along the way.Starring Michael Craig,Francois Prevost and Billie Whitelaw.