Ride Or Die is ready to hit the open road on Prime Video. Octavia Spencer and Hannah Waddingham team-up for the buddy adventure series. Amazon MGM Studios brought a new trailer for the show. Spencer and Waddingham are friends who can't seem to stay out of trouble. Prime Video shifted into gear with
Really, is there anything more badass than women on motorcycles? Throw in comedy powerhouses like Octavia Spencer and Hannah Waddingham and we're sold before we even watch it. That is precisely how the highly-anticipated action comedy Ride or Die makes us feel, and we're sure we're not alone.
You know the story of A Christmas Carol. Frankly, the classic Charles Dickens tale of the Ghosts of Christmas Past, Present, and Future haunting a Scrooge to be a better person has been adapted into more movies and shows than I can count. But now, Apple TV+ has a new take on the story, told from
Lost in the Reel's video review for Encounter.There have honestly been so many alien invasion movies and television shows that have graced our screens, that it is hard to keep track of them. Many of these projects go the simple route; clinging on to the audience's fascination and fears of
In the Thunder Force world, only villains (known as Miscreants) are born with superpowers. When Emily (Octavia Spencer) invents a serum to manufacture superpowers, her estranged childhood friend Lydia (Melissa McCarthy) accidentally takes it. The pair then become an unlikely crime-fighting duo.
Are you ready to face down the witches? They’re coming straight for your home. The Witches just announced it will bypass US theaters and premiere exclusively on HBO Max in time for Halloween. The cast includes Anne Hathaway, Octavia Spencer, Stanley Tucci, Kristen Chenoweth and Chris Rock. Plus,
The Sheep Detectives is a towering testament of how powerful animated stories can be when done right. A genuine crowdpleaser, the film is sure to warm and break your heart, wrestling with richly textured explorations of death and grief, lost and found families, and the necessity of memory.
Indulging every absurd idea that pops into his head, the film unfolds with propulsive vibrance and unshackled execution. That approach turns out to be a bit of a gift and a curse for Riley; a gift in the sense that we get something fresh and original, but a curse because its unbridled approach
We've had haunted house movies. Sure, but have we had a haunted van movie? That's what Passenger amounts to at its most distilled form. This is a horror movie about a demonic force (the opposite of Saint Christopher) that has been chasing and killing travelers for hundreds of years. Basically, the