I went to the very house where they filmed the buzzed about movie UNDERTONE (in theatres tomorrow) to talk with filmmaker Ian Tuason and stars Nina Kiri and Adam DiMarco.
I went to the very house where they filmed the buzzed about movie UNDERTONE (in theatres tomorrow) to talk with filmmaker Ian Tuason and stars Nina Kiri and Adam DiMarco.
It didn't do great at the box office this weekend, but I am all about THE BRIDE!, and I welcome the day when it gets the Jennifer's Body style reassessment I know it's going to get in the future. (I was right about that one, too.)
Another interview this week! This time with filmmaker Emma Higgins and actress Kate Hallett about their collaboration on the music and obsession driven thriller SWEETNESS, now playing in Canadian theatres and available on VOD in the US.
Here's an interview I did with rising star Ashton James about taking on the titular role in the reimagining of the hockey classic YOUNGBLOOD, now playing in select theatres.
Had a really great talk with Pixar story supervisor and animator (and Canadian) John Cody Kim about HOPPERS, working with Daniel Chong, what his role is on a film, how Miyazaki and Bong Joon-Ho were major influences on the look and tone of the movie, and the meteoric rise of Tom Lizard.
Lots of interviews happening this week on my end, so let's start with this chat with YOUNG SHERLOCK stars Hero Fiennes-Tiffin and Zine Tseng. Their show premieres today on Prime Video.
Happy Friday. Time for a new episode of Out of Time Reviews, including looks at The Bluff, The President's Cake, This is Not a Test, In Cold Light, Jimpa, Kokuho, Man on the Run, and yeah, I talk about how much Scream 7 really sucks.
why are any of you watching the State of the Union when you could be walking into a screening of Nirvanna: The Band The Show The Movie right now like I am
Also this week, I had the absolute privilege to talk to actor Troy Kotsur about his role as a broken down cowboy in the Alberta shot thriller IN COLD LIGHT, which also sees its Canadian theatrical release this weekend.
A few more interviews for this week, including this talk with filmmaker Adam MacDonald about his zombie thriller/YA novel adaptation THIS IS NOT A TEST, now playing in the US and opening in Canada this weekend.
Starting my week off by sharing with all you lovely folks an interview I did with Toronto based animator Eric De Carolis about the work he did on GOAT.
New episode of the review show is up! Here are looks at How to Make a Killing, Midwinter Break, Psycho Killer, Montreal My Beautiful, Sirat, and EPiC: Elvis Presley in Concert. 3 are good! 3 are not good!
If you're looking for a well done, Toronto-centric film to catch this week, there's still time to catch the intricately woven FINCH AND MIDLAND, now playing in select Canadian cinemas.
Still playing catch-up, so here's a look at the disappointing horror comedy COLD STORAGE, which is now playing in theatres. A film that's neither funny or scary enough to succeed.
These have been up and running for a minute now, but here are some interviews I did with Alona Tal, Johnny Ray Gill, Isaiah Mustafa, and Samantha Walkes about their roles on season two of CROSS. Check 'em out!
Been behind on a lot of work, so I guess it's time for a big ol' video review covering CRIME 101, THE MOMENT, PILLION, MY FATHER'S SHADOW, and NIRVANNA THE BAND THE SHOW THE MOVIE! (Available in the US and Canada only on this one, sorry)
If you're in the Toronto or Scarborough area this weekend, the best new release in theatres is the microbudget thriller SWAY, which is a taut, dialogue driven B-movie noir with a good deal of style and solid performances. A real low key gem. At Morningside and Yonge and Dundas.
Here's a look at Simรณn Mesa Soto's amusingly ironic comedy/drama A POET, which starts stronger than it ends, but is still worth a watch. Opens in select cities today.
King shit. More people need to be honest about this stuff.
Bouncing back from being sick the past week to talk about why Luc Besson's DRACULA is frustratingly pointless. Opens in North American theatres this weekend.
Over on the Sundance side of my coverage, I take a look at the very funny romantic comedy CHASING SUMMER, which teams up star/writer Iliza Shlesinger with boundary pushing indie filmmaker Josephine Decker and yields great results.
Also over on YouTube, a talk with actress and writer Camille Wormser and director Alec Goldberg about their pilot episode of SOFT BOIL, which premiered in Sundance's first ever Episodic Pilot Showcase.
Head on over to the YouTube page to check out my interview with director Rachel J Morrison and producer Will Butler about their documentary JOYBUBBLES, which premiered at Sundance this week and tells the story of one blind man's ability to connect the world through unusual methods.
Also on the Sundance side of things, I talked to director Lily Platt about her short CRISIS ACTOR, which just picked up an award at the festival.
Haven't had time to highlight it much, but I have also been doing a bunch of Sundance coverage! Including this interview with Canadian actor/writer/director Kelly McCormack about her short film HOW BRIEF, which made its world premiere at the festival this week.
The new Jason Statham movie SHELTER is everything you think it's going to be, but on the good side of what you think it's going to be. Opens in theatres this Friday.
Although I think it would work better at a tight 85 minutes (or even better as a Tales from the Crypt episode), Sam Raimi's darkly comedic survival thriller SEND HELP manages to be a lot of fun. In theatres everywhere Friday.
Crazy week over here between life stuff, regular work stuff, and Sundance prep, but I wanted to point out a delightful chat I had with filmmakers Dusty Mancinelli and Madeleine Siws-Fewer and actors Grace Glowicki and Ben Petrie about the thriller HONEY BUNCH, in Canadian cinemas starting today.
This week has started off with a broken tooth, food poisoning, a death in the family, and the continued collapse of society. But good news, I have Friday off.