Premiering to mixed/decent reviews at Dallas International Film Festival, I'm not quite sure what to make of the indie Lucky. With our first trailer, there ...
Of all the board games of years gone past, the nerdiest and most time consuming one has to be Risk. Released in the 1950's, it pitted players against each o...
2011 is shaping up to be another stellar year for documentaries. After all, it has a lot to live up to with my favorite film of last year being the genre. M...
A new Pixar film hitting theaters means a number of things. First, it will make a whole lot of bank. I would say secondly that it will be of pristine qualit...
For his follow-up to District 9, director Neill Blomkamp is adding variety to his ensemble cast. We have the big Hollywood stars Matt Damon and Jodie Foster. Th...
It seems as though longtime Paul Thomas Anderson collaborator Robert Elswit, who won an Oscar for his work on There Will Be Blood, will not be shooting his ...
Disney is betting big on Damon Lindelof, Lost co-showrunner and writer of the upcoming sci-fi projects Cowboys & Aliens, Prometheus and Star Trek 2. They've...
One of the most buzzed-about titles coming out of Sundance Film Festival this year was the feature-length directorial debut of Dee Rees, Pariah. Based off o...
Angelina Jolie is reportedly in talks to join Mark Wahlberg in David O. Russell's supposed next project (with a lame title), The Silver Linings Playbook.
...
Ruaridh Arrow’s documentary directorial debut, 'How to Start a Revolution', focuses on Nobel Peace Prize nominee Gene Sharp, and what his writings have done to inspire groups of protestors living under oppressive regimes to stand-up for their own democratic freedom. Focusing on nonviolent action, Genes ideas have been seen put in action during periods of unrest in Burma, Thailand, Bosnia, Estonia, Iran, Indonesia, Zimbabwe, Venezuela, and now Syria, Egypt, and elsewhere in the Middle East....