Reel Reviews | The Residence
If you’re looking for a binge-worthy series that’s part political backstage drama, part comedic whodunit, and all-around entertaining, The Residence is worth checking into.
If you’re looking for a binge-worthy series that’s part political backstage drama, part comedic whodunit, and all-around entertaining, The Residence is worth checking into.
Big names, big budget, and zero spark. The Electric State should have been the Russo Brothers’ next sci-fi knockout, instead, it’s a hollow road trip through a world that never connects.
The shield has a new bearer, and the world has a new threat.
The city of New Rome hosts the conflict between Cesar Catilina, a brilliant artist in favor of a utopian future, and the greedy mayor Franklyn Cicero. Between them is Julia Cicero, her loyalty divided between her father and her beloved in Megalopolis.
Despite having a textbook plot, this film is engaging and entertaining. Don’t look for a lot of traditional horror scares but be ready for buckets of blood.
by Rebecca Farley | via Refinery29 There’s no one character at the center of this episode — well, actually there is. The narrator finally emerges [read more]
by Rebecca Farley | via Refinery29 Television shows, in the eleventh hour, often sprint off into another destination, usually to gift one character the ability [read more]
by Rebecca Farley | via Refinery29 This episode, written by the playwright Jack Moore, is a tour de force. Last season gave us the Barry [read more]