Set in London, 1962, Ginger & Rosa is a largely insufferable coming-of-age story, charting the friendship between two teenage girls set against a backdrop of the threat of nuclear destruction and the beginning of the change in attitudes towards sex and femininity that the 60s instigated. Wonderfully shot, but populated with insufferable characters and terrible British accents, Ginger & Rosa is a psuedo-intellectual endeavor, overflowing with proto-philosphical nonsense.
Halloween is just round the corner, and as supporters of the fine arts of horror, Best for Film attended a sneak preview of Hop Farm Fright Night’s Freak Week, courtesy of the lovely folks over at blinkbox. Spoiler: We shat ourselves
The world cried out for it, DreamWorks listened. Ben Stiller and co are back, and Madagascar 3 proves a surprisingly enjoyable trip during a stellar month for animated releases. Things get weird as the homesick animals’ journey back to New York takes a detour through the old continent…
The trailer for Jason Statham as psychotic gangster Parker breaks no new ground, but what do we care? We’re philistines. Just give us more Statham!
James Cameron’s life after Pandora. If not this, probably therapy.
Josh Duhamel stars in latest Nicholas Sparks adaption. Something tells us it might be a romance
Is it December 14th yet? IS IT?
“Me gusta la manera en que mueres, chico…”
And the world turns
History is once again made history in Tarantino’s latest
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