There's a long line of classic baseball films: Rookie of the Year, Field of Dreams, The Sandlot, and A League Of Their Own, to name a few. And in a year when Los Angeles just won its eighth World Series, no film seems more perfect to experience either for the first time or re-watch than Ultraman:
Ultraman: Rising is perhaps the best recent addition to the Ultraman franchise from Tsuburaya Productions. Mostly due to the addition of the titular Ultraman having to care for an adorable baby kaiju. That and much, much more is what turns Ken Sato into an Ultradad at his finest hour. Ultraman:
The Devil Wears Prada 2 is a master class in sequels. While fans have been begging for the return to Runway, the story of waiting 20 years is exactly what was needed. The film is a sequel built on patience, not nostalgia bait, and that restraint pays off. When we last saw Andy Sachs (Anne
Hokum follows in the footsteps of other horror movies released recently that are what we like to call "slow burns." That subgenre usually starts slow and brings our characters into another world or brings an item from another world into ours. Hokum comes from writer/director Damian McCarthy, who
Universal Studios Hollywood kicked off their holiday festivities on November 29th, but they had a special event for press to take in all the different Grinchmas activities at the park. Universal Plaza is the home of Whoville this year and features a giant 65-foot-tall tree and of course, the