Reel Reviews | Stay
Director Jas Summers transforms a fractured marriage into a supernatural confrontation in Stay, a moody psychological horror film.
Director Jas Summers transforms a fractured marriage into a supernatural confrontation in Stay, a moody psychological horror film.
Colin Hanks’ John Candy: I Like Me is more than a documentary, it’s a love letter to one of comedy’s most beloved figures.
Diego Luna and Tonatiuh lead Bill Condon’s reimagining of Kiss of the Spider Woman, a story that drifts between the grim confines of a prison cell and the glittering fantasy of Hollywood dreamscapes.
In Derek Cianfrance’s Roofman, Manchester’s uncanny ability to see what others can’t allows him to live in plain sight — but also blinds him to the truth about love, family, and responsibility.
Julia Roberts leads the charge in a stylish but emotionally distant psychological thriller that asks bold questions about power, abuse, and loyalty without always delivering the answers.
In Steve, Cillian Murphy delivers one of his rawest performances yet as a reform school headmaster struggling to hold together a crumbling institution and his own fractured psyche.
The Lost Bus takes us inside the deadliest fire in California history, where Matthew McConaughey and America Ferrera lead a harrowing true story of courage, sacrifice, and survival.
Mixing bruising fight scenes with the emotional toll of addiction and fractured love, the film asks whether glory in the ring is worth the cost outside of it.