Hunger Games: Catching Fire, The
The good news about The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is that it is actually a much more enjoyable film than the first one.
The good news about The Hunger Games: Catching Fire is that it is actually a much more enjoyable film than the first one.
After quite some time, I managed to revisit Darren Aronofsky’s Requiem for a Dream, and it’s still holding strong for me.
Black is Bhansali’s Indian re-imagining of the Helen Keller story — in here, we follow Michelle McNally as she narrates the story of her life as a deaf and blind girl and the relationship with her teacher.
Have you ever been in love? So in love that you’re willing to give up your life not being with the person you love, only for the peace of mind that by doing so, they’ll have a decent life.
Set in 1985, National Security is based on the memoir by Kim Keun-tae, a democratic activist who was kidnapped and tortured for 22 days under the orders of gruesome police inspector Lee Geun-an, better known as The Undertaker.
A girl and her little brother are stranded when a magnitude 8.0 earthquake strikes in Tokyo.
Derek Cianfrance teams up with Ryan Gosling once again and offers you three stories for the price of one in The Place Beyond the Pines.
Shane Carruth delivers a sophomore feature that’s an emotional powerhouse with as much metaphysical prowess as any Malick or Tarkovsky film.