If you caught yourself wondering about a Winnie-the-Pooh film that came out not long before this one, you’d be right in your musings.
In this day and age, we are spoiled for choice when it comes to movies with streaming services such as Stan, Netflix, and Hulu, and no matter the desired genre, there is sure to be a bit of something for everyone.
Director Harmony Korine’s latest film The Beach Bum follows the exploits of the rebellious stoner Moondog (McConaughey).
Australian humour is one that foreigners often find difficult to relate to. However, being a true-blue Kiwi myself, I understand what it’s like to come from a country in which the jokes are understood by pretty much no one. Though there were a few AFL quips that went right over my head in The Merger, the film still had me in fits throughout.
Hopes are always going to be high when Shaun of the Dead (2004) dream team Simon Pegg and Nick Frost come together with their unique brand of anxious comedy.
Jonah Hill’s directional debut Mid90s is set to be released in Australia later this year and a great warmup to that film is the amazing documentary, All This Mayhem.
Rowan Atkinson’s bumbling spy Johnny English is back in the new trailer for the third instalment of the comedy film series.
On a hazy Thursday night, Brian Henson inserts his dusty old The Muppet Movie VHS into an ancient CRT TV he found in the basement.
If you’ve seen The Greasy Strangler (2016) and loved it, then there’s no doubt that An Evening with Beverly Luff Linn is on your radar.
R.L. Stine’s famous creatures come to life on Halloween in the upcoming family comedy adventure film Goosebumps 2: Haunted Halloween.
The Merger is an upcoming Australian AFL-themed comedy film that sees a bunch of misfits come together to save a footy club and tackle ignorance in a small country town.
The first trailer for the Taraji P. Henson-starring What Men Want has hit the web.
If Twitter users are to be believed, then we should be in for a treat with the upcoming Melissa McCarthy-starring The Happytime Murders.
Ready for another ensemble cast of lovable idiots trying to do a thing behind the curtains of a bigger thing before people find out they aren’t really suited to do that bigger thing?
When they said Crazy Rich Asians, they meant it. Truly, they did. Crazy? Yeah, somewhat. Asian? Very much so. And rich? ABSOLUTELY.
I would point out the irony in me, a white male, reviewing Spike Lee’s BlacKkKlansman, a story centring around the emergence of 1970’s Black Panthers within a town dominated by the Ku Klux Klan, except it isn’t irony at all.