Over the last week, we've looked at the Expendables lineup, celebrating the history of action cinema. But what about the future?
I’m about to give you what might be a quintessential 80s movie. It contains cheese, trucks, Kenny Loggins, large and sweaty men, Sylvester Stallone, and...
When I think of action movies I think of 80s buff dudes running around beating up “enemies.” There is something cathartic about these movies and the way that they give every viewer a sense of “hell yeah!”
Ford v Ferrari chronicles the efforts of the Ford Motor Company to create a car to end Ferrari’s winning streak at the 24 Hours of Le Mans race in France in 1966.
Today, we're going to talk about a story that’s as disruptive as it gets and a film that ends up feeling even more impressively prescient than ever - depressingly so, but impressive nonetheless.
This week we’re focusing on Disruption Docudramas. What does that mean exactly? Well, we’re going to discuss movies that tell the true story of massive shake ups in certain fields.
Paperback movies always make for great dad movies. If your dad is anything like my dad, he reads a lot of paperbacks.
Did you know that Jaws was going to be a movie before the book it’s based on was even published?
With the upcoming release of A Haunting in Venice, we wanted to take this opportunity to talk about our favorite pulpy book to screen adaptations. We’re discussing ‘paperback’ novels.
As we said in our intro for the week, some of the greatest films ever made take place in 24 hours, movies like Die Hard, Dog Day Afternoon, or 12 Angry Men and I’m picking none of them!
Michael Haneke might be a new name to some of you, so if you haven’t heard of him you’ve got to check him out.