The Strain's final season is focused and fierce, with opening episodes that plant seeds for stomach-turning strigoi showdowns and heartbreaking character collisions all the way down the line to the vampire saga’s highly anticipated finale.
The Book of Henry is a hair away from being in league with the most ludicrous Lifetime original movies, but its cast, slick production and Trevorrow’s willingness to take risks make it an oddball chunk of entertainment you’ll be sure to tell your friends about, whether you liked, loved or loathed it.
Cars 3 isn’t remarkable or groundbreaking or even all that memorable, but it’s a rock-solid movie that leaves a far better taste in the mouth than its critically panned predecessors.
In the ‘80s, chameleonic comedienne extraordinaire Tracey Ullman made her first TV appearances on a couple of British sketch shows and a sitcom before emigrating to the States, where she took her career to the next level by creating a handful of successful, critically acclaimed comedy programs, introducing the world to the now-iconic Simpsons characters, and appearing in several major motion pictures.
The nightmarish vision of Negan (Jeffrey Dean Morgan) swinging his barbed wire baseball bat Lucille back and forth, our band of grizzled heroes spread out before him, on their knees, at his mercy, haunted The Walking Dead fans all summer, and on Sunday the show returned to pay off one of the most intense, divisive, high-stakes television cliffhangers in memory. Who met their untimely demise at the end of Negan’s deathstick?
Jeauffre's blending of terrestrial and extraterrestrial imagery is hypnotizing and spectacular, but this story of survival feels too bloodless to appeal to the average viewer.