Taras D. Butrej endures the brightly colored mayhem of Bryan Singer's latest action-packed installment of Marvel's Merry Mutants, X-Men: Apocalypse.
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Taras D. Butrej endures the brightly colored mayhem of Bryan Singer's latest action-packed installment of Marvel's Merry Mutants, X-Men: Apocalypse.
Hollywood attempts another thriller based around the financial crisis and income inequality. It goes about as well as you'd expect. Taras D. Butrej reviews George Clooney and Julia Roberts in Money Monster.
Captain America and Iron Man face off, in a battle thirteen movies in the making, in Captain America: Civil War, which Matthew Guerruckey calls the Empire Strikes Back of Marvel movies!
Gabriel Ricard ponders the wonder of the theater-going experience, Beetlejuice, and the fate of D.C. Comics on the big screen in the latest edition of Captain Canada's Movie Rodeo.
Reviews: Batman v. Superman: Dawn of Justice (2016), Zootopia (2016), 10 Cloverfield Lane (2016), Heaven Can Wait (1978), Pee-Wee's Big Holiday (2016)
Gabriel Ricard explores some of last year's biggest films in an Academy-approved edition of Captain Canada's Movie Rodeo.
Reviews: Anomalisa (2015), Deadpool (2016), Carol (2015), The Revenant (2015), Brooklyn (2015)
As the awards ceremony nears, the Drunk Monkeys Film Department breaks down this year's Oscar nominees and delves into the controversy surrounding the lack of diversity in the actors and directors who have been recognized this year.
Gabriel Ricard takes on the Oscars So White controversy and reviews a few of the nominated films in his latest Captain Canada column.
Reviews: The Martian (2015), Pocket Money (1972), Seduced and Abandoned (1964), Trumbo (2015), Moonwalkers (2015).
Sean Woodard reviews How to Be Single, giving it a solid C for its weak script and abundance of cliches.
The Merc with a Mouth comes to bright, violent life in Deadpool, starring Ryan Reynolds, a slam-bang action flick that Juese Cutler calls "Tom and Jerry with butt stuff".
Straight from Taras D. Butrej's latest review: "Shame on you, Pride and Prejudice and Zombies. You knew what you were, but then you tried to become something you were not." Burr Steers' adaptation of the novel earns a dismal D+.