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Highly Suspect Reviews: Shazam
SHAZAM MOVIE REVIEW The very first comic book superhero to get adapted into a film (in 1941) finally gets a second round with the release of the DCU film Shazam. Once a more popular hero than even Superman, the originally titled Captain Marvel (forced to change his name over a lawsuit with DC, and 20 years after that being bought
Screener Squad: Mercy Black
MERCY BLACK MOVIE REVIEW I think the Slender Man murder (look it up) convinced us all that A: Kids are dangerous and B: Faith can be a scary viral meme. I mean, no duh, but this really cemented that an imaginary horror character dreamed up on the internet could take on such weight that it led some children to commit
Screener Squad: Sobibor
SOBIBOR MOVIE REVIEW We may not be able to pronounce the name, but we certainly understand the heavy drama featured in Sobibor. Lara and Bradly are here to tell you about Russia’s entry to last year’s Best Foreign Language Film category with this WWII Holocaust drama. Based on a story set within the infamous Sobibor concentration camp in Poland, we
Screener Squad: Diane
DIANE MOVIE REVIEW Diane’s life may be getting complicated, but Diane does a great job showing that life simply and elegantly. The biggest winner at the 2018 Tribeca Film Festival, Diane follows its lead character (Mary Kay Place), a woman who fills her days with busy work to help out friends, family and anyone else who needs her. Though a
Screener Squad: The Legend of Cocaine Island
THE LEGEND OF COCAINE ISLAND MOVIE REVIEW Needing your documentary fix? Allen and Frank have the movie for you! Recently released through Netflix, the film follows the journey of a desperate man who goes on a treasure hunt to find a duffel bag buried on a Caribbean island amounting to $2 million in cocaine. Sounds like a crazy plan? Well…it
Screener Squad: We Are Boats
WE ARE BOATS MOVIE REVIEW Now I’m going to be hearing Fun.’s “We Are Young,” but then say ‘boats’ instead! We Are Boats is a drama that follows a young woman (Angela Sarafyan) who dies but becomes an ‘angel of death’, assisting the officious supernatural department with the job of helping the living move towards a better fate. This leads

