Tuesday 31 May 2016

The Fifth Wave



Cassie (Chloe Moretz) is a normal, teenage girl, she enjoys a party, has a crush on a football player at her school and has a curfew. However, when an alien ships hovers over Earth, her life is about to change. The alien ship seems dormant at first, but it suddenly begins to launch waves of attacks, firstly they cut the power, next they cause earthquakes that devastate the land. On the third wave a disease wipes out most of humanity and in the fourth wave they hide amongst us, pitting friend against friend ensuring that deep mistrust lies with humanity. Now, venturing through a post-apocalyptic Earth, Cassie must trust her instincts, find her brother and try to survive the final deadly wave.

The Do-over



It’s becoming common place to see films released on demand whilst they're still in the cinemas. Unsurprisingly, theatres aren’t too keen on this but some films just aren't worth the price of the big screen experience not because they’re not any good but because they’re just not suitable for the big screen. In the case of Netflix, however, they aren’t even getting a cinematic release, films such as Beasts of No Nation and Adam Sandler’s The Ridiculous 6 were released exclusively on Netflix.

Saturday 28 May 2016

Green Room


Indie hotshot Jeremy Saulnier’s previous film, Blue Ruin, had all the hallmarks that made it a potential classic of the revenge genre, his latest film, Green Room, also has the hallmarks to be classic of the siege genre in the sane vain as John Carpenter's Assault On Precinct 13.

Thursday 26 May 2016

Thursday Movie Pick # 98: The Internet





Let’s face it, film and TV generally do not understand how computers or the internet works. Hacking is not done by some super smart computer guy typing away manically on a keyboard but by the gullible, unaware and sometimes downright stupid idiot handing over, willingly or unwillingly, their personal details. Some films are made with such breath-taking ignorance that it's astonishing that the script was accepted in the first place. Some films, such as The Net starring Sandra Bullock, are more outdated than the type writer, it’s an indication of how far we have advanced over the course of a decade. - Check out - http://wanderingthroughtheshelves.blogspot.co.uk/

Tuesday 24 May 2016

Captain America: Civil War


After the destruction of Sokvoia, The Avengers are under pressure because of their supposed lack of care about the human life they swore to protect. Further pressure is heaped upon them when Wanda Maximoff/Scarlet Witch's (Elizabeth Olsen) mistake costs the lives of several Wakandan humanitarian workers in Lagos. Following this high profile incident the Sokovoi Accords are drafted, and agreed by 117 countries, this will effectively put The Avengers under the control of a UN panel. The morality of this splits the group with Iron Man (Robert Downey Jr), Black Widow (Scarlet Johnasson) and others on one side and Captain America (Chris Evans), Falcon (Anthony Mackie) and others on the opposing side.

X-Men: Apocalypse


Back in the ancient Egyptian times the people of Egypt worshipped a god who is regarded as the first ever mutant, this mutant is Apocalypse (Oscar Isaac). To live a life of immortality Apocalypse transfers his mind into a body of a younger man, however, before the transition is complete, Apocalypse is betrayed by his followers and buried alive. Thousands of years later he his reborn and he recruits four powerful mutants, including Fassbender’s Magneto, and begins to rid of the world of humans. Meanwhile, humans and mutants still struggle to live in harmony and this divides the mutant kind ensuring that the fight against Apocalypse is a fraught and divided one.

Saturday 21 May 2016

2016 Horror Triple Bill


The Veil stars Jessica Alba as a documentary filmmaker who wants to find out what happened to the members of Heaven’s Vail who all supposedly committed suicide in a bid of devotion to their leader Jim Jacobs (Thomas Jane). In order to do this, Maggie Price (Alba) recruits the help of the only known survivor Sarah Hope (Lily Rabe). Clearly based on American cult leader Jim Jones, the film takes a supernatural turn rather than focusing on what would have been a billion times more unnerving and scary. The fact that Jim Jones managed to convince over 900 people to commit suicide is far more disturbing and unnerving. Unfortunately, director Phil Joanou takes the supernatural route, but despite that the film is enjoyable enough, the performances are good enough (Thomas Jane is in full scenery chewing mode) and the scares scary enough for The Veil to be a mostly enjoyable film

3/5

Thursday 12 May 2016

Thursday Movie Picks - Spanish Language movies.


Buenos Dias! Welcome to Thursday Movie Picks hosted by Wandering Through the Shelves, this week's theme is movies in the Spanish language. 

Sunday 8 May 2016

Son of Saul



Saul Auslander (Géza Röhrig) is a Jewish Hungarian prisoner working as a member of the Sonderkommando at one of the Auschwitz Crematoriums, when Saul finds a boy choking to death Saul becomes convinced that this boy is his son, Saul then tries to bury the corpse of a boy who may or may not be his son. Saul tries to give the body a respectful death by salvaging the body and finding a rabbi to bury it. Meanwhile there is a talk of rebellion in the air but Saul's focuses is on the corpse he believes to be his son.