Showing posts with label film criticism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label film criticism. Show all posts

31 Days of Horror: The Black Phone 2 Review — Scott Derrickson’s Chilling Sequel Expands the Nightmare

Black Phone 2 

Directed by Scott Derrickson

Written by C. Robert Cargill, Scott Derrickson 

Starring Ethan Hawke, Mason Thames, Madeleine McGraw

Release Date October 17th, 2025 

A horror sequel done right: Black Phone 2 reunites Finney and Gwen in a nightmare at Camp Alpine, delivering chilling visuals, emotional stakes, and a terrifying evolution of The Grabber. Our full review dives into what works — and what doesn’t, with no spoilers.


Revisiting the Black Phone Universe

The Plot: Nightmares Return at Camp Alpine

Character Depth and Emotional Stakes

Derrickson’s Visual Mastery: Cold, Claustrophobic, and Beautiful

The Grabber Reimagined

The Ending: Controversial but Earned

Final Verdict

Movie Review Hell or High Water

Hell or High Water Review (2016): Chris Pine & Jeff Bridges Deliver Oscar-Worthy Performances




In Hell or High Water, Pine and Foster play two brothers pushed to extremes. Facing foreclosure on their family farm, they start robbing the very banks trying to take their land—banks that loaned their mother money she could never repay. Their goal? Use the stolen money to pay back the same banks and reclaim what’s rightfully theirs.


Ben Foster is electric as the unpredictable, recently released ex-con, while Chris Pine portrays the more grounded, morally conflicted brother doing bad things for what he believes are good reasons. Jeff Bridges plays the seasoned Texas Ranger chasing them down—a sharp, instinctual character trying to stop them before things spiral even further.


The film unfolds like a modern western, blending Coen Brothers grit with classical Western atmosphere. Its tight pacing, gorgeous cinematography, and powerful performances make it one of the most compelling films of 2016.



The final confrontation between Chris Pine and Jeff Bridges is unforgettable—arguably the best scene in any film that year. It’s layered, intense, and laced with regret, justice, and understanding.


More than just a crime drama, Hell or High Water tackles the economic desperation of rural America and how far people will go when the system is rigged against them.


Bottom line? Hell or High Water is the best movie I saw in 2016. Don’t miss it—expect Oscar nominations for both Pine and Bridges.


Relay (2025) Review: Riz Ahmed and Lily James Can’t Save This Thriller Snoozefest

Relay  Directed by: David Mackenzie Written by: Justin Piasecki Starring: Riz Ahmed, Lily James Release Date: August 22, 2025 Rating: ★☆☆☆☆...