Pushing Daisies
Part fairytale romance, part quirky crime mystery solving, part snarky comedy food-loving musical and more; Pushing Daisies achieved a stroke of genius uniqueness that is hardly ever going to show up on television again.
Part fairytale romance, part quirky crime mystery solving, part snarky comedy food-loving musical and more; Pushing Daisies achieved a stroke of genius uniqueness that is hardly ever going to show up on television again.
By explaining everything and leaving nothing to the imagination, Now You See Me falls into dreadful and ridiculous predictability.
This overly-long melodramatic rom-com is the best fluff I’ve watched in a very long time, as we follow a man looking to reconnect with his ex-best-friend.
Turbo may not be one of the greatest Dreamworks movies, but it’s not meant to be either.
Kamo is a Kyoto woman who hates Kyoto’s hoity-toity attitude towards tradition, hence she left for Tokyo to never return again, but now she must return to take over the troubled family inn.
In White Frog, Ellie and Fabienne Wen set out to tell the story of a well-off Asian American family with a few skeletons in their closet.
DBSK’s debut album as Jpop group TVXQ (a.k.a. Tohoshinki) is a surprising piece of work that easily highlights one of the main reasons why the group came to dominate the Japanese market.
When Master Yang’s temple is selected to be torn down because it’s so old, Tiger accepts a man’s fighting offer for cash to repair the place, but as he fights, he begins losing his humanity in Keanu Reeves’ directorial debut.
Believed to be dead, John Reid… with the aid of Tonto… is reborn as the Lone Ranger. Hi-Yo, Silver!
De Palma throws in a couple of edgy elements to this remake of a French film. Instead, of course, Passion can’t even excel in what the other did right.