Dan Sallitt's remarkable, boldly conceived fourth feature is a vivid character study of Jackie, a charismatic, fiercely intelligent, soulful young woman struggling to navigate the choppy waters of adolescence, and nurturing an intense emotional attachment to her older brother that crosses over unmistakably into incestuousness. A critic and blogger as well as a filmmaker, Sallitt has established a unique and confident voice, both in his writing and in his long-gestating but always impressive feature films (all of which will be screening at Anthology on this calendar). A great admirer of (and profoundly astute commentator on) the work of such masters of behavioral cinema as Eric Rohmer, Maurice Pialat, and Mikio Naruse, Sallitt is perhaps contemporary American cinema's foremost keeper of their flame, and THE UNSPEAKABLE ACT a deeply moving example of his craft. (c) Anthology Release Date The Unspeakable Act Mar 1, 2013 Limited If You Like this movie you can streaming The Unspeakable Act movie without downloading HERE
User Ranting The Unspeakable Act : 3.9 User Percentage For The Unspeakable Act : 83 % User Count Like for The Unspeakable Act : 82 All Critics Ranting For The Unspeakable Act : All Critics Count For The Unspeakable Act : 4 All Critics Percentage For The Unspeakable Act : 4 %
17-year-old Jackie is in distress as her older brother Matthew gets his first girlfriend and prepares for college. Though Matthew does not share her incestuous desire, Jackie fights the intrusion of reality on her idyllic childhood world
TagLine The Unspeakable Act
Trailer For The Unspeakable Act
Review For The Unspeakable Act
Sensitive subject-matter is handled with tact and intelligence in this tart if talky US indie. Neil Young-Hollywood Reporter
[It] is about the familiar more than it is about the forbidden. Nicolas Rapold-New York Times
The film would simply not work without [Medel], no matter how sensitively Sallitt handles such provocative, ick-producing bait. David Fear-Time Out New York
The Umbrella Corporation's deadly T-virus continues to ravage the Earth, transforming the global population into legions of the flesh eating Undead. The human race's last and only hope, Alice (Milla Jovovich), awakens in the heart of Umbrella's most clandestine operations facility and unveils more of her mysterious past as she delves further into the complex. Without a safe haven, Alice continues to hunt those responsible for the outbreak; a chase that takes her from Tokyo to New York, Washington, D.C. and Moscow, culminating in a mind-blowing revelation that will force her to rethink everything that she once thought to be true. Aided by newfound allies and familiar friends, Alice must fight to survive long enough to escape a hostile world on the brink of oblivion. The countdown has begun. -- (C) Sony Release Date Resident Evil: Retribution Sep 14, 2012 Wide If You Like this movie you can streaming Resident Evil: Retribution movie without downloading HERE
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Resident Evil: Retribution
User Ranting Resident Evil: Retribution : 3.3 User Percentage For Resident Evil: Retribution : % User Count Like for Resident Evil: Retribution : 236,812 All Critics Ranting For Resident Evil: Retribution : 4.4 All Critics Count For Resident Evil: Retribution : 64 All Critics Percentage For Resident Evil: Retribution : 30 %
The Umbrella Corporationâs deadly T-virus continues to ravage the Earth, transforming the global population into legions of the flesh eating Undead. The human raceâs last and only hope, Alice, awakens in the heart of Umbrellaâs most clandestine operations facility and unveils more of her mysterious past as she delves further into the complex. Without a safe haven, Alice continues to hunt those responsible for the outbreak; a chase that takes her from Tokyo to New York, Washington, D.C. and Moscow, culminating in a mind-blowing revelation that will force her to rethink everything that she once thought to be true. Aided by new found allies and familiar friends, Alice must fight to survive long enough to escape a hostile world on the brink of oblivion. The countdown has begun.
TagLine Resident Evil: Retribution
The Ultimate Battle Begins
Trailer For Resident Evil: Retribution
Review For Resident Evil: Retribution
The script is incoherent and the acting is terrible -- avatars would have been an improvement. Rafer Guzman-Newsday
Thuddingly awful. Joe Neumaier-New York Daily News
Some sequels suggest that no one involved with a franchise really cares anymore. Joe Leydon-Variety
A zombie plague may have laid waste the world, but apparently supplies of black leather unitards have yet to be exhausted. Jeannette Catsoulis-New York Times
During the film's final sequence the director explains all while also suggesting that the franchise's nuttiest days are, remarkably, yet to come. Clark Collis-Entertainment Weekly
Writer-director Paul W.S. Anderson ... attempts to fill out a flimsy plot structure by making the characters' comings and goings overly convoluted. Stephanie Zacharek-Film.com
Any unfortunate souls who wander in with no prior Resident Evil experience will wonder how something this anemic and shallow was ever popular. You and me both, friends. Eric D. Snider-Twitch
Looks are absolutely everything in Retribution, which melds stunning 3-D computer-graphics and spectacular sets with a skimpy storyline and zero characterization. Steve Newton-Georgia Straight
More high-calorie, low-sense, audiovisual CGI stimulation arrives in the form of this fifth and most roundly unsatisfying entry in the previously lithe and fun videogame franchise. Brent Simon-Screendaily
It has a Rolls with spinning hub caps - what more do you want? James O'Ehley-Sci-Fi Movie Page
More of the same idiotic swill that Anderson feeds his numbskull fan base. Felix Vasquez Jr.-Cinema Crazed
It's a funny thing about Jovovich as Alice: she gives the character just enough personality, but not enough to break the somber apocalyptic mood. Rob Gonsalves-eFilmCritic.com
The Resident Evil films are not everyone's bag, although they seem to be evolving into their own brand of hyper-stylized cheese, made more extreme with each outing. Jeremy Wheeler-TV Guide's Movie Guide
"Retribution" has actually got some very decent action and 3D effects. The story is still razor-thin. But, by the end of it all, I was ready for the next sequel, the presumed finale. Paul Chambers-Movie Chambers
For those of us who know what we're in for with the series, the fifth installment is for better or worse, more of the same - albeit with the familiar levels of ridiculousness from its maddeningly inconsistent director/writer Jeffrey Lyles-Lyles' Movie Files
You can put as much gloss on top of the shaky foundations and wooden acting as possible but as soon becomes apparent - you can't varnish a turd. Ross Jones-Morris-HeyUGuys
If you liked the other Resident Evil films, you'll like this, and the end suggests there'll be plenty more. Roz Laws-Birmingham Post
The ending threatens yet more. Let's hope the fates intervene and put Paul and Milla in divorce court before then. Ed Whitfield-The Ooh Tray
More than ever, forgoes real attempts at character and story for lots of repetitive zombie skirmishes. James White-SFX Magazine
Resident Evil: Retribution is style-over-substance in every possible definition of the concept. Ben Kendrick-ScreenRant
Even noisier, more incoherent, and more like watching someone play a shooter-style video game than its predecessors. Ken Hanke-Mountain Xpress (Asheville, NC)
While the last movie felt clean and more character-focused, this one seems a good deal lazier, both in the writing and directing departments. Jeffrey M. Anderson-Common Sense Media
'Regurgitation' might be a more appropriate subtitle for this redundant fifth go-round... John Beifuss-Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN)
Containing almost no story, Resident Evil: Retribution shows the series' video-game origin more than ever. John Wirt-Advocate (Baton Rouge, LA)
Nobody goes to a Resident Evil movie expecting a classic but this fifth entry in the series is just plain cruddy. Marc Savlov-Austin Chronicle
Milla Jovovich is still a great action heroine, but the movie is just more of the same old stuff. Jackie K. Cooper-jackiekcooper.com
The second prequel to the original Star Wars trilogy takes place ten years after the events depicted in Star Wars: Episode I -- The Phantom Menace. Now 20, young Anakin Skywalker (Hayden Christensen) is an apprentice to respected Jedi knight Obi-Wan Kenobi (Ewan McGregor). Unusually powerful in the Force, Anakin is also impatient, arrogant, and headstrong -- causing his mentor a great deal of concern. The pair are ordered to protect Padme Amidala (Natalie Portman), the former queen of the planet Naboo, now representing her world in the Galactic Senate. Someone is trying to assassinate her on the eve of a vote enabling Supreme Chancellor Palpatine (Ian McDiarmid) to build a military force that will safeguard against a growing separatist movement led by mysterious former Jedi Count Dooku (Christopher Lee). After another attempt on Padme's life, Obi-Wan and Anakin separate. The young Jedi and Padme fall in love as he escorts her first to the security of Naboo and then to his home world of Tatooine, where the fate of his mother leads him to commit an ominous atrocity. Meanwhile, Obi-Wan travels to the secretive planet Kamino and the asteroid-ringed world of Geonosis, following bounty hunter Jango Fett (Temuera Morrison) and his son, Boba (Daniel Logan), who are involved in an operation to create a massive army of clones. A vicious battle ensues between the clones and Jedi on one side and Dooku's droids on the other, but who is really pulling the strings in this galactic conflict? In late 2002, the movie was released in IMAX theaters as Star Wars: Episode II -- Attack of the Clones: The IMAX Experience, with a pared-down running time of 120 minutes in order to meet the technical requirements of the large-screen format. ~ Karl Williams, Rovi Release Date Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D Sep 20, 2013 Wide If You Like this movie you can streaming Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D movie without downloading HERE
Actors For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D
Genres Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D : Science Fiction & Fantasy,Cult Movies
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D
User Ranting Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D : 3.3 User Percentage For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D : 65 % User Count Like for Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D : 829,018 All Critics Ranting For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D : 6.6 All Critics Count For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D : 219 All Critics Percentage For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D : 67 %
TagLine Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D
A Jedi Shall Not Know Anger. Nor Hatred. Nor Love.
Trailer For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D
Review For Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D
This time the exposition is so thick that everyone except acolytes may tune out. Jonathan Rosenbaum-Chicago Reader
Christensen is a winning mix of sultry and sulky as the now older Anakin, while McGregor is finally beginning to relax as the mentor who understandably refuses to treat his moody pupil like a grown-up. -Time Out
Lucas has never been able to conjure another Han Solo, a character who could, with simply a wink, remind us that this was just an overgrown Saturday afternoon serial. Bill Muller-Arizona Republic
A commendable example of the sort of movie we once loved and then outgrew. Peter Rainer-New York Magazine
The scale of the enterprise is thrilling; it's too bad the movie is so muddled on so many different levels. David Edelstein-Slate
The Phantom Menace and Attack of the Clones have reduced the franchise to, well, a franchise. Desson Thomson-Washington Post
Sit back and enjoy fantastic, imaginative visuals. Nell Minow-Common Sense Media
It starts off briskly with some fantastic special effects and a great high-speed chase but then founders on the shores of bad script writing. Amber Wilkinson-Eye for Film
Though, lacking in plotline it makes up for in action and character depth. Felix Vasquez Jr.-Cinema Crazed
Lucas does not always recognize his limitations. This tends to make films of mixed quality. Still, there is always enough that is excellent to make them worth seeing. Mark R. Leeper-rec.arts.movies.reviews
Attack of the Clones emerges looking as bad as if not worse than its 1999 predecessor, thanks to the lame romantic subplot, which is so badly written, directed and performed that it surpasses Jar-Jar Binks as the all-time low point in the series. Steve Biodrowski-ESplatter
Makes The Phantom Menace seem like one long clearing of the throat before Lucas could begin to tell the real story. Matthew De Abaitua-Film4
The special effects are remarkable, yet somehow numbing, and the film only partly lives up to the promise in the title of Lucas's company, Industrial Light and Magic. Philip French-Observer [UK]
While it lacks the quality of Empire's script and performances, Clones is the most visually enthralling of the series so far. Jeffrey Overstreet-Looking Closer
It is certainly better than the childish Phantom Menace and the final 45 minutes of straight action beat the editing nightmare at the end of the last film. Joe Lozito-Big Picture Big Sound
As convincing a job as they, Christensen, and Lee do, they all end up being upstaged by the jaw-dropping skills of a CGI creation: Yoda (again voiced by Frank Oz), who finally gets a chance to show exactly why he has such a legendary reputation. Michael Dequina-Film Threat
The magic has definitely been recaptured. Chris Gore-Film Threat
The muppet steals what's otherwise an underwhelming show. Christopher Smith-Bangor Daily News (Maine)
Clones is far from perfect, but when it clicks, it revives the old spirit that made a generation become so obsessed with all things Star Wars in the first place. Mark Pfeiffer-Reel Times: Reflections on Cinema
It's impossible...to dismiss a film with this much stuff: exotic production design, imaginative characters, and a wide variety of digital jedi fu. Peter Canavese-Groucho Reviews
It would be easy to say that this film is fantastic and blows away the others, but unfortunately I cannot. Mark Sells-Oregon Herald
Superior to Episode I -- The Phantom Menace, with its annoying Jar Jar Binks and its dull, galaxy-hopping story line. Judith Egerton-Courier-Journal (Louisville, KY)
Enjoy this film they will. Todd Gilchrist-FilmStew.com
Alternately excites and bores. Jim Shelby-Palo Alto Weekly
Movie Images Star Wars: Episode II - Attack of the Clones 3D
In THE BLING RING, Oscar Winning filmmaker Sofia Coppola takes us inside the world of these teens, where their youthful naivete and excitement is amplified by today's culture of celebrity and luxury brand obsession. The members of the Bling Ring introduce us to temptations that any teenager would find hard to resist. And what starts out as youthful fun spins out of control, revealing a sobering view of our modern culture. (c) A24 R Release Date The Bling Ring Jun 21, 2013 Wide If You Like this movie you can streaming The Bling Ring movie without downloading HERE
User Ranting The Bling Ring : 3.1 User Percentage For The Bling Ring : % User Count Like for The Bling Ring : 18,102 All Critics Ranting For The Bling Ring : 6.3 All Critics Count For The Bling Ring : 162 All Critics Percentage For The Bling Ring : 60 %
Inspired by actual events, a group of fame-obsessed teenagers use the Internet to track celebrities' whereabouts in order to rob their homes.
TagLine The Bling Ring
Trailer For The Bling Ring
Review For The Bling Ring
This is a funny, sarky, bang-on portrayal of the freakiness of celeb obsession. The story would sound outrageous - if it wasn't true. Cath Clarke-Time Out
Emma Watson is comedic gold. Richard Roeper-Richard Roeper.com
All the characters are shallow and one-dimensional and, while one can argue that this is the point, it doesn't make for 90 minutes of engaging cinema. James Berardinelli-ReelViews
Daring to face these often noxious, seemingly empty phenomena on aesthetic terms, and taking on a degree of their flatness and simplicity, Coppola renders them surprisingly substantial. Richard Brody-New Yorker
Coppola neither makes a case for her characters nor places them inside of some kind of moral or critical framework; they simply pass through the frame, listing off name brands and staring at their phones. Ignatiy Vishnevetsky-Chicago Sun-Times
s Coppola offering a critique (a stated hope) or somehow being complicit? These questions seem to coil in on themselves, making The Bling Ring that weird yet common hybrid of tsk-tsking and celebration. Lisa Kennedy-Denver Post
A typically underwhelming effort from Sofia Coppola... David Nusair-Reel Film Reviews
The pointless pic, lacking any sense of humanity, left me confused about what the director was trying to say about the social deviants featured. Dennis Schwartz-Ozus' World Movie Reviews
Once the initial thrill of riding shotgun to these robberies starts to fade, the audience has little to do but wallow in amorality, absent any fresh perspective from Coppola. Scott Tobias-The Dissolve
The film is surface-shallow - but only because the culture it reflects is arguably too superficial to withstand any kind of analysis. Michael Bonner-Uncut Magazine [UK]
90 minutes of derisive mockery and finger-pointing. We agree with the sentiment, sure. But what about it? Eric D. Snider-About.com
A sly true-crime drama. Kate Stables-Total Film
Director Sofia Coppola delivers a wily critique of celebrity culture in The Bling Ring as she dresses up the true story of Los Angeles teenagers robbing their Hollywood idols' homes. Kaleem Aftab-Independent
Coppola's dialogue is remorselessly authentic in its inanity, and this blankness runs deep in what finally feels a shallow film about shallow people. Catherine Shoard-Observer [UK]
Once again, Sofia Coppola confounds expectations with an astutely relevant approach to a true story. These events may be torn from the headlines, but they also echo the world around us. Rich Cline-Contactmusic.com
Lighter and more accessible than the likes of Lost In Translation, Coppola's fifth feature is perceptive, funny and deceptively knowing. Stephen Carty-Flix Capacitor
As a potential future video manual which could encourage some people to become high-end criminals, it left me uneasy. Graham Young-Birmingham Post
Soon reveals itself to be grimly repetitious, simply showing these kids stealing, then partying, taking pictures of themselves and putting them on Facebook, over and over again, until they are caught. David Sexton-This is London
The picture feels like a modestly competent sketch of a subject that doesn't warrant this much attention. Donald Clarke-Irish Times
This may be a telling observation on today's lack of privacy but it doesn't make our teenage bandits very interesting or clever. Henry Fitzherbert-Daily Express
A film about teenagers, crime, celebrity, LA, the internet and the cinema. These still waters run very deep indeed. David Jenkins-Little White Lies
The film confirms that vanity is a delicate, difficult target. Miss it, and you and your artistry seem as vain and misdirected as your material. Nigel Andrews-Financial Times
[An] engaging, superbly acted and impeccably production-designed drama, though the story is a little too fixated on the moral blankness of its characters and it completely lacks emotional depth. Matthew Turner-ViewLondon
For a satire on America's modern day celebrity culture, The Bling Ring is hard to beat. Hadley Freeman-Guardian [UK]
Watson's performance is the real revelation here... [It] makes you eager to see what she will do next. Daniel M. Kimmel-New England Movies Weekly
Perhaps Coppola errs towards the mundane to emphasise that these were just typical, peer-pressured California kids. But being credible doesn't make them interesting. Elliott Noble-Sky Movies
In the year 2154, two classes of people exist: the very wealthy, who live on a pristine man-made space station called Elysium, and the rest, who live on an overpopulated, ruined Earth. The people of Earth are desperate to escape the planet's crime and poverty, and they critically need the state-of-the-art medical care available on Elysium - but some in Elysium will stop at nothing to enforce anti-immigration laws and preserve their citizens' luxurious lifestyle. The only man with the chance bring equality to these worlds is Max (Matt Damon), an ordinary guy in desperate need to get to Elysium. With his life hanging in the balance, he reluctantly takes on a dangerous mission - one that pits him against Elysium's Secretary Delacourt (Jodie Foster) and her hard-line forces - but if he succeeds, he could save not only his own life, but millions of people on Earth as well. -- (C) Sony Release Date Elysium Aug 9, 2013 Wide If You Like this movie you can streaming Elysium movie without downloading HERE
Actors For Elysium
Matt Damon,Jodie Foster,William Fichtner,Sharlto Copley,Wagner Moura,Alice Braga,Diego Luna
Genres Elysium : Drama,Science Fiction & Fantasy
Visitor Ranting & Critics For Elysium
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In the year 2159, two classes of people exist: the very wealthy who live on a pristine man-made space station called Elysium, and the rest, who live on an overpopulated, ruined Earth. Secretary Rhodes (Jodie Foster), a hard line government ofï¬cial, will stop at nothing to enforce anti-immigration laws and preserve the luxurious lifestyle of the citizens of Elysium. That doesnât stop the people of Earth from trying to get in, by any means they can. When unlucky Max (Matt Damon) is backed into a corner, he agrees to take on a daunting mission that, if successful, will not only save his life, but could bring equality to these polarized worlds.
Eli (Jesse Eisenberg) is a piano prodigy. Today is the audition that will determine his future-- will he launch a career and take off into the world? Or will he stay stuck, caring for his sister and mother (Melissa Leo) who, despite her cheerful, loving disposition, is a drug addict. The only obstacle to a seamless transition into his future is dropping off Mom off at the center where she will enter rehab, but a glitch in the system forces sends them off to enlist the help of an unlikely ally, her drug dealer Sprinkles (Tracy Morgan). The day spirals downhill quickly, and the hapless team must collaborate every step of the way to battle their own demons and get Eli out of the rabbit hole. -- (C) IFC Release Date Why Stop Now Aug 17, 2012 Limited If You Like this movie you can streaming Why Stop Now movie without downloading HERE
User Ranting Why Stop Now : 2.7 User Percentage For Why Stop Now : % User Count Like for Why Stop Now : 2,341 All Critics Ranting For Why Stop Now : 4.3 All Critics Count For Why Stop Now : 20 All Critics Percentage For Why Stop Now : 25 %
When a college piano prodigy tries to check his mother into rehab, he is taken hostage by her drug dealer and swept along on a wild adventure.
TagLine Why Stop Now
A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Rehab.
Trailer For Why Stop Now
Review For Why Stop Now
First-time directors Phil Dorling and Ron Nyswaner can't find a coherent emotional tone, and the actors' energetic contortions can't keep the sinking story afloat. Colin Covert-Minneapolis Star Tribune
Drug abuse stories are to Hollywood what babies are to mothers: fascinating to the talkers, not so interesting for their audiences. Kyle Smith-New York Post
Feels trapped in the limbo between comedy and drama where many indies gamely venture, but from which few emerge with any resonance. Robert Abele-Los Angeles Times
As "Why Stop Now?" gathers momentum, the increasingly uneasy sensation it produces is not unlike that of being in the back seat of a speeding car whose drunken driver refuses to give up the wheel. Stephen Holden-New York Times
Why Stop Now refuses to keep faith with its characters, to carry them as far as they can go without tying them up in a neat bow of redemption. Ella Taylor-NPR
This comic drama tries too hard to serve up a slice of manic life, but Eisenberg, along with Tracy Morgan and Isiah Whitlock Jr. as the affable druggies, provides some spark. Joe Neumaier-New York Daily News
An odd mix of blatantly comedic moments and strangely serious scenes, Why Stop Now finds itself stranded on an odd middle ground between comedy and drama. Chelsey Grasso-Paste Magazine
Young man's very bad day includes drugs, swearing, more. S. Jhoanna Robledo-Common Sense Media
The alleged comedy 'Why Stop Now' is here to prove that when it tries really, really hard to be awful it can overcome the obstacle of having a terrific cast. Jordan Hoffman-ScreenCrush
Boasts such a diverse cast of recognizable faces that you have to wonder where it all went wrong..a half-hearted tale that should land with more impact than it does. Marshall Fine-Hollywood & Fine
Each actor is adept at twisting a line or bit of spectacular illogic so gasps turn to laughs. Kirk Honeycutt-honeycuttshollywood.com
Fast-paced and driven by Eisenberg, again finding varying dimensions in a twitchy character that isn't a repeat of his past roles. Matt Pais-RedEye
It's handsome, well-paced, and nicely acted, but suffers from a fatal lack of purpose, as if Dorling and Nyswaner couldn't commit to whatever movie they wanted to make. Scott Tobias-AV Club
Shifting between wacky situation comedy and somber familial drama, Why Stop Now? isn't invested enough in either mode to convincingly pull off its genre-hopping ambitions. Andrew Schenker-Slant Magazine
Delivers just enough laughs to remain recommended, despite the fact that this hard to pigeonhole head-scratcher would have benefited from making a total commitment to either comedy or a drama. Kam Williams-myfilmblog
Isn't very funny or poignant, drifting somewhere in between while the actors make the best out of a lackluster storytelling situation. Brian Orndorf-BrianOrndorf.com