Olivia Munn
Ellie Bamber
“Mr. & Mrs. Smith” Review
Sharing similar concepts to the two other movies and television series by the same name, this version works best when it’s doing it’s own thing instead of doing what’s been done before. The sound track, action, acting, and character developments are all top notch, but there’s times towards the end of season one that it hews too closely to the Pitt/Jolie version that I love so much, though I did love the ultimate resolution with the nosey neighbor. I am extremely unhappy with the storyline with the cat, imho a death of a family pet shouldn’t be used for dramatic effect and ranks among fridging girlfriends to me. It was the lone distraction in a great series, but I know many people (myself included) don’t like watching violence toward animals, especially ones that depend on the kindness of people to survive.
Final images of Ingenuity reveal an entire blade broke off the helicopter
This new data should help us understand Ingenuity’s final moments on Mars.
Meet the Big Money Moguls Behind RFK’s Quest to Unseat Biden
I went to CPAC as an anthropologist to understand Trump’s base − they believe, more than ever, he is a savior
Anya Taylor-Joy
Mexican church officials have helped arrange a truce between 2 warring drug cartels
Claudia Cardinale (1960s)
“Madame Web” Review
With a story set in 2003, I would actually believe you if you told me that the movie itself was made in 2003, maybe even if you said it was made for TV. It’s not a terrible film, but it’s also not a great one, with a story that’s easy enough to follow, but without much nuance and extremely little super hero action, which was a shock to me. It’s 90% four women running from a mysterious bad guy, then one action filled confrontation, as brought to you by Pepsi, featuring Pepsi bottles, Pepsi signs, then glass bottles of Pepsi from a Chinese take away meal as a reward for winning their fight. The entire thing feels like an overly complicated prequel to four more interesting stories, but as I said, it’s just interesting enough to not be a ‘bad” film.
Seeing Sydney Sweeny play a shy, naive, and innocent teenager was weird.