Five Cool Things and Anthony Bourdain
By Cinema Sentries |
Three different fellas have a say in what was and wasn’t cool this week.
Phantom Thread DVD Review: Anderson and Day-Lewis Can’t Recapture “There Will Be Blood” Magic
By Cinema Sentries |
I couldn’t hook into the movie, despite all it had going for it.
TV Review: Supernatural: “Scoobynatural”
By Cinema Sentries |
A trio of Sentries team up to present their reaction to this special episode.
Unearthed & Untold: The Path to Pet Sematary Blu-ray Review: A Documentary for the Fans
By Cinema Sentries |
Stephen King’s underrated horror masterpiece gets an insightful documentary honoring its history.
Midnighters Movie Review: Small Scale Horror
By Cinema Sentries |
Even if they don’t quite stick the landing, the Ramsay Brothers establish themselves as a duo to watch out for.
Martin Scorsese to Receive Inaugural Robert Osborne Award
By Cinema Sentries |
Bob was a true believer in the cinema, so to receive this award in his name means a great deal to me.” – Martin Scorsese
Half Magic Movie Review: A Brash Take on Sex Positivity
By Cinema Sentries |
Heather Graham’s debut is certainly relevant, but still feels like there is another story waiting to be told.
Director Brian Crano Talks Fantasy, Romance, and His New Film “Permission”
By Cinema Sentries |
“I wanted to reflect the lives and social problems that I’m seeing, both personally and in my community.” – Brian Crano
Permission Movie Review: A Romantic Drama That Doesn’t Have All the Answers
By Cinema Sentries |
Brian Crano’s film takes the romantic drama in a new direction with some unique characters, but often feels unbalanced in its approach.
Book Review: The Movie Art of Syd Mead: Visual Futurist by Syd Mead & Craig Hodgetts
By Cinema Sentries |
A giant collection of art from the man who showed us what the future looked like.
Book Review: The Art of Captain Underpants: The First Epic Movie by Ramin Zahed
By Cinema Sentries |
Awe-inspiring and just regular inspiring too. And a whole lot of fun.
I, Tonya Movie Review: Using Camp to Deconstruct It
By Cinema Sentries |
Although an imperfect film, I, Tonya celebrates the imperfections of its leading lady with surprising emotional resonance.
Book Review: Star Hawks, Volume Two: 1978-1979 by Gil Kane and Ron Goulart
By Cinema Sentries |
Reminiscent of a million things but totally unique – I’ve never seen anything quite like it!
Call Me by Your Name Movie Review: A Deeply Felt Ode to Unrequited Love
By Cinema Sentries |
Transcending tropes of the genre, Call Me by Your Name is a wondrous feat in expressing emotions often left unspoken.
Book Review: Valerian and the City of a Thousand Planets: The Art of the Film by Mark Salisbury
By Cinema Sentries |
All the beauty of the movie, with none of the shortcomings.
Book Review: Star Wars: On the Front Lines by Daniel Wallace
By Cinema Sentries |
It’s not to often something comes along that makes Star Wars better, but this book does just that.
Director Alexandra Dean Discusses Bombshell Hedy Lamarr
By Cinema Sentries |
Dean talks about researching her complex subject and Lamarr’s renewed place in history.
Book Review: Justice League: The Art of the Film by Abbie Bernstein
By Cinema Sentries |
As nice as this book looks, it still looks like the Justice League movie.
Bombshell: The Hedy Lamarr Story Movie Review: A Beautiful Story of a Brilliant Mind
By Cinema Sentries |
Alexandra Dean’s documentary tends to follow a familiar path but does a fantastic job of reexamining an underrated talent.
Joe Versus the Volcano Blu-ray Review: An Overlooked Tom Hanks Gem
By Cinema Sentries |
It’s a lot of fun, and sometimes that’s all you want, or need, from a movie.
Book Review: For Better or For Worse: The Complete Library, Volume One (1979-1982) by Lynn Johnston
By Cinema Sentries |
Funny, heartwarming, and familiar, but above all, real.
God’s Own Country Movie Review: Love Abounds On-Screen
By Cinema Sentries |
An emotionally sensitive look at intimacy and identity.
Creep 2 Movie Review: Another Disturbing Entry into the Mind of a Lonely Murderer
By Cinema Sentries |
Though not nearly as unnerving as its predecessor, Creep 2 carves new avenues in its look into the mind of a polite serial killer.
Wizard World Chicago 2017 Review: A Pretty Good Show
By Cinema Sentries |
I came, I saw, and in the grand geek tradition, I had a great time but still complained about it online.
The Zodiac Killer DVD Review: To Catch a Killer…Or Not
By Cinema Sentries |
It seems the idea behind the making of The Zodiac Killer all along was to actually catch him.
Book Review: Wonder Woman: The Art and Making of the Film by Sharon Gosling
By Cinema Sentries |
Like the film, this book is warm and inviting, strong and bold, and pretty damn awesome.
Pretty Little Liars: The Complete Seventh and Final Season DVD Review
By Cinema Sentries |
A show with countless plot holes, farfetched storylines, and unrealistic wardrobes – PLL worked, and worked well.
Landline Movie Review: Too Bound Up in Its Own Familiarity
By Cinema Sentries |
Gillian Robespierre’s follow-up to Obvious Child.
Their Finest Blu-ray Review: One of the Year’s Finest Films
By Cinema Sentries |
One of the year’s best movies looks to get a new audience on a wonderful Blu-ray.
Previewing San Diego Comic-Con 2017: Sunday
By Cinema Sentries |
If you are still there Sunday, this is where you might find us.
Previewing San Diego Comic-Con 2017: Saturday
By Cinema Sentries |
And just like that it’s the end of Saturday and the Con starts to wind down.
Book Review: Donald Duck: The Complete Daily Newspaper Comics Volume 4 (1945-1947)
By Cinema Sentries |
The past adventures of Donald Duck come alive again!
ELP: Once Upon a Time in South America (4-CD Set) Album Review
By Cinema Sentries |
The 1993 & 1997 reunion tour concerts showcase an ELP trying to pick up the pieces following more than a decade in the wilderness.
Book Review: Superman: The Golden Age Newspaper Dailies (1942-1944)
By Cinema Sentries |
New Library of American Comics collection of World War II era daily newspaper Superman comic strips shows why the the superhero stayed on the home front instead of the battlefield.
Shadowman Movie Review: A Beautiful Mind Fraught by Invisibility
By Cinema Sentries |
The story of tortured artist Richard Hambleton is short of depth but long on intrigue.
Hidden Figures DVD Review: By the Numbers, but Done Well
By Cinema Sentries |
Worth seeing, especially if you don’t know the story of Katherine Johnson and her ilk.
Mine Movie Review: An Interesting Idea Mines for Substance
By Cinema Sentries |
The single-location thriller goes international with the simplistic Mine.
Book Review: The Art of Selling Movies by John McElwee
By Cinema Sentries |
Entertaining visual look at the history of American movie newspaper ads suffers from issues with accompanying text
Book Review: Superman: The Atomic Age Sundays, Volume 2 (1953-1956)
By Cinema Sentries |
An important and worthwhile historical artifact, even if it is my least favorite one so far.
Nocturnal Animals Blu-ray Review: Tom Ford’s Dark Masterpiece
By Cinema Sentries |
Tom Ford’s follow-up to A Single Man is a moody and evocative thriller you can’t ignore.
Five Cool Things and Greta Anderson
By Cinema Sentries |
Mat gets by with a little help from his friends.
Book Review: Fireball: Carole Lombard and the Mystery of Flight 3 by Robert Matzen
By Cinema Sentries |
Using numerous interviews, a personal climb to the crash site, and government documents, Matzen constructs the story deliberately.
Gimme Danger DVD Review: Jim Jarmusch Pays Loving Tribute to Iggy and the Stooges, but Misses Some Opportunities
By Cinema Sentries |
A long overdue official history lesson documenting the “greatest rock and roll band ever.” Or, at least one of them.
Best Comic Releases of 2016
By Cinema Sentries |
With 2016 at its long overdue close, it’s time for me to tell you what I considered the best releases in the world of comics and graphic novels.
Book Review: Only the Dead Know Burbank by Bradford Tatum
By Cinema Sentries |
A literary display of the origins of horror in film, harkening back to terrors from our past.
Snowden DVD Review: Joseph Gordon Levitt’s Performance is a Fun Thing to Watch
By Cinema Sentries |
Oliver Stone plays it straight with the surprisingly subtle, subdued, and nuanced docu-drama Snowden.
Man of the World: The Peter Green Story DVD Review
By Cinema Sentries |
An often fascinating, but equally frustrating study of the guitarist and songwriter, once spoken of in the same breath as guitar-Gods like Clapton, Page, and Hendrix.
The Secret Life of Pets Blu-ray Review: Too Simple?
By Cinema Sentries |
It fails to rise above the barrier separating the good from the iconic.