Jon Watts’ best Spidey film yet is fan service done right.
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All in Sequel
Jon Watts’ best Spidey film yet is fan service done right.
Lana Wachowski & Co.’s screenplay crackles, but the filmmaking hampers its potential.
Jason Reitman carries on his family tradition with this thoroughly entertaining legacy sequel.
David Gordon Green & Co. ramp up the body count for this grisly sequel, but neglect their writing and directing duties.
Tom Hardy keeps the odd couple action/comedy come book series entertaining, despite a pair of lackluster villains.
Nia DaCosta’s sequel succeeds as a horror film, but is less effective as a social thriller.
James Gunn’s violent and funny take on the band of DC criminal misfits is a step up from David Ayer’s 2015 attempt, but also feels like a missed opportunity.
Reviews of Pig, Space Jam: A New Legacy, Escape Room: Tournament of Champions, Joe Bell, and Val.
The action sequences and central conflict finally align for a passable F&F film…or the series has finally turned Edwin’s brain to mush. You decide.
James Wan is sorely missed behind the camera in this lackluster horror sequel.
Eddie Murphy and Arsenio Hall rekindle the magic of their 1988 comedy classic in this rare sequel that’s nearly as funny as the original.
The animated series experiences a major evolutionary leap forward in this fast and funny sequel.
Sacha Baron Cohen and Maria Bakalova earn plentiful laughs in this rare sequel that improves on its predecessor.
Michael Bay’s hyperbolic style is sorely missed in the series’ third installment — as is Will Smith’s charisma.
Leaving “Sleeping Beauty” behind in favor of “Game of Thrones” territory, this action-packed sequel is a captivating allegory about misbegotten war.