“I want to be dead with my friends!” Keith Buckley screams on Every Time I Die’s sixth album, and it’s a pretty fair assessment of the Buffalo band’s doomy bipolarity.
Hollywood continues to dust off insignificant detritus from the eighties crap rack where it belongs, and with this ancient Johnny Depp–Fox TV vehicle, they may have finally turned over the last, um, sun-bleached VHS box.
What The Blair Witch Project did for horror movies and Cloverfield did for giant-monsters-stompingon-Manhattan flicks, this handheld-camera comedy hopes to do for the all-night rager.
Hanks plays a doting dad lost in the terrorist attacks, while Oscar-approved Bullock does post-podium duty as the weeping widow who assists their nine-year-old son on a quest of rebirth.
Heather Donahue has come a long way since she starred in The Blair Witch Project—and that’s something she wants readers of her memoir, Growgirl, to know.
Here we have yet another spy thriller about a femme agent gone rogue, as well as yet another movie directed by “retiring” Oscar-winner Steven Soderbergh.
In this series from the late sixties, cat burglar Alexander Mundy escaped jail time by agreeing to use his shady skills as a professional thief for the U.S. government.