Review: Jurassic World: Dominion
Being billed as the “conclusion to the Jurassic era” and closing out the Jurassic Park/World storyline, Jurassic World: Dominion has some fun moments and the very welcome return of the OG Jurassic Park trio of Sam Neill, Laura Dern, and Jeff Goldblum but is overall kind of a bloated finale that is neither truly terrible nor particularly great.
Review: Scare Zone
A real killer stalks a haunted attraction, picking off the staff one by one, in the slasher horror movie Scare Zone, which was partially filmed on location at Universal Studios Halloween Horror Nights.
Review: Top Gun: Maverick
There have been numerous “legacy sequels” of varying degrees of quality over the last few years but Top Gun: Maverick easily stands out as one of, if not the, best ones yet with, among other things, some truly jaw-dropping aerial action.
Review: Chip N Dale: Rescue Rangers
Beloved to almost every 90s kid, The Disney Afternoon has already seen one fantastic reboot in the former of the excellent new Ducktales and now Chip N Dale gets their shot at a comeback with the absolutely hilarious and thoroughly meta new Disney+ movie, Chip N Dale: Rescue Rangers.
Review: Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness
A fun but somewhat messy ride, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness continues to explore the alternate universes of the MCU and pits Doctor Strange and his new ally America Chavez up against a powerful magical threat that threatens all of reality.
Review: The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent
Nicolas Cage has played many memorable and over-the-top characters over his career but in The Unbearable Weight of Massive Talent he takes on possibly his greatest role, himself (or at least a fictionalized version of himself).
Review: Morbius
Riding high from Spider-Man: No Way Home, Sony crashed back down to Earth for the unbelievably bland Morbius, the latest movie in their bizarre Spider-Man side universe.
Review: Invincible
Out now on Digital and DVD from Lionsgate, Invincible has a cool premise similar to something like Bloodshot or Universal Soldier and solid stars but squanders the opportunity for cool action and has a meandering plot that has way too much downtime.
Review: The Adam Project
Ryan Reynolds and Shawn Levy re-team after last year’s Free Guy for the solid and thoroughly entertaining new Netflix time travel action movie, The Adam Project, where Reynolds plays a fighter pilot from the year 2050 who travels back in time on a rescue mission but ends up in 2022 and meets his 12 year old self, played by newcomer Walker Scobell.
Review: The Batman
After years of anticipation, the newest incarnation of the Dark Knight hit theaters this past weekend and director Matt Reeves has delivered one of the best versions of Batman that feels like the cinematic version of the best Batman graphic novels.
Review: Uncharted
After years in development hell, Uncharted finally hit theaters as the movie version of the excellent Naughty Dog video game series with Tom Holland as treasure hunter Nathan Drake and Mark Wahlberg as his mentor and veteran thief Victor “Sully” Sullivan as the duo races to find Magellan’s lost treasure, a stash of gold worth billions.