Title Tws summary ▼ Trust Year Viewable | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Brad Pitt has his own great astronaut movie now, as every one of today’s great moviestars must.1 Ad Astra is a stately space epic, albeit punctuated with an atomic blast and more than a few death-defying set pieces. Most impressively, James Gray’s instant classic reinforces our conception of …
WikChip Video
The opening shots aren't in the movie.
|
||||||
Contrived plot and thin characters don’t matter in the world of Jurassic Park. One of the best movies I’ve ever seen. The true stars of this film are the dinosaurs. The film has some of the most amazing special effects I’ve ever seen. The suspense keeps you at the edge of your seat the whole time… |
||||||
How could you not love this movie? Ok, so it doesnn’t blow anyone away with acting, production, etc. But the story-line itself, coupled with Heston’s campy drama makes this an all time family pleaser.
|
||||||
Boxoffice hit! |
||||||
At first I didn’t think the wacky idea that father and son, talking over the radio through time, would make for an engaging film — but I was wrong. Dennis Quaid and Jim Caviezel do a great job as time-transcendant crime fighters. Great action, suspense, twists and turns keep you on edge througho… |
||||||
Reminiscent of 1984 and Blade Runner, but with the modern action effects of the Matrix. Equilibrium delivers a futuristic totalitarian society riddled with internal struggles of the coolest killer around: Christian Bale. Not too cheesy despite a couple of close calls (daily doses of “Prozium…
|
||||||
|
||||||
M. Night Shyamalan peaked with Signs. Wonderfully creepy and magnificently manipulative, it’s a self-consciously old-school scary movie. Even this non-horror fan enjoyed it. Mel Gibson’s Muted Max performance anchors writer-director Shyamalan’s achingly heavy story. Leading a great cast…
WikChip Image
Charismatically great acting: Gibson ...
|
||||||
Action-packed, a great storyline, good acting — a movie I would see again. |
||||||
This movie was a thought inspiring conversation between college professors confronted with the assertion from John Oldman (David Lee Smith) that he has lived for 1000’s of years. Approached from the perspective of a mental game, the other professors explored and challenged the idea, causing David… |