Tenet Review
Tenet ultimately leaves you mentally and physically exhausted yet ready to go back(wards) into the theater to repeat the experience.
Tenet ultimately leaves you mentally and physically exhausted yet ready to go back(wards) into the theater to repeat the experience.
Floors it as two brothers take on a valiant quest to reunite loved ones using long-dormant magic.
Reinforces the established theory that most video games should not be turned into movies.
More than anything else, The Rhythm Section is a score in search of a picture.
Loaded with rich atmosphere, several memorable shots and enough humor to keep us engaged.
Bad Boys for Life delivers older men in strife as it goes from bad to worse.
Borrows heavily from other classics and still forges its own path for a fun romp deep in the ocean.
Ties up some loose ends, yet it doesn’t provide all of the answers to questions raised throughout this trilogy.
Delivers enough new elements and surprises to continue the ascent of this fun franchise
Boasts just a few great scenes and mostly plods along from one memorable moment to another like a zombie looking for its next meal.
Gemini Man’s central gimmick and familiar plot come off more as Photoshop Man than a compelling drama.
Picks itself up from a trash heap of clichés and ill-conceived casting to overcome its flawed foundation.