While “1923,” “1883” and “Yellowstone” connect, it’s really the landscape and the idea of Western Expansion that holds them together. You don’t need to see all of them to appreciate what Sheridan has done.
Movie critic Bruce Miller says there’s plenty of ninja action in "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem" and a lot of familiar tropes, b…
Once it tells us how the turtles were born, "Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles: Mutant Mayhem" settles down and offers up pop culture references that should make you smile.
The Journal’s Jared McNett shows how to download and browse the new Sioux City Journal app.
Meryl Streep doesn’t have a problem blending in.
Like co-star Kristen Schaal (who plays the vampire guide), he realizes character roles spell longevity. “Every time you bump into Kristen, her energy is so positive you can go another 12 hours if you need to,” he says. “That’s the kind of energy and talent you want to be surrounded by.”
Jennifer Lawrence – working harder than she should – stars as a Montauk native who’s behind on her taxes and doesn’t have a car to earn Uber money. When she sees an online ad offering a car in exchange for “friendship,” she jumps – and we’re off.
More than anything, “The Covenant” is about honor and loyalty. It interprets both in different ways but demonstrates how important a person’s word really is.
Writers seem so enamored with their ability to play off the characters’ earth, wind, fire and water clichés they don’t miss an opportunity to toss two more in. The result is an overstuffed metaphor for the world we live in.
In the book “The Art of Elemental,” editors show how the artists separated air, earth, water and fire into separate communities, each with buildings that played into their strengths and weaknesses.
Overreaching, overly comical and entirely overdone, it tries to capture what DC Comics hopes to do with its franchises over the next period of years. It’s a lot to unpack and, at times, more than a little scattered.
Movie critic Bruce Miller says “Elemental” has visuals that spark some interest, but the story itself is more interested in making puns than f…
Clocking in at three hours and 12 minutes, the sequel to “Avatar,” the 2009 success, takes too long to get its story going. When it does, we realize it’s basically the same story, just with new treasure.
Producers of the latest “Transformers” are apparently so eager to reboot the series they use part of their time to detail the car/robots and what they’re designed to do.
Movie critic Bruce Miller says “Transformers: Rise of the Beasts” has some wincingly bad moments but it’s a fairly harmless ride. If you can b…
Keanu Reeves reportedly gave stunt men Rolex watches when they wrapped “John Wick: Chapter 4.” Good thing, too. They earned every bit of them.
The Spider-Verse is larger than you even imagined.
Movie critic Bruce Miller says “Spider-Man: Across the Spider-Verse” isn’t an animated film meant for very young movie goers but it is a spide…
Nicolas Cage made a dandy vampire in “Vampire’s Kiss.” So what went wrong with “Renfield,” the story of Dracula’s sidekick?
Despite the excellent work of Halle Bailey as Ariel and Melissa McCarthy as Ursula in the live action version of "The Little Mermaid," Sioux C…
The new live-action version of “The Little Mermaid” is so stuffed with extraneous characters, lavish orchestrations and special effects, you wonder if there’s room to move. Too many fish in the sea, you might say.
The Journal’s Jared McNett shows how to download and browse the new Sioux City Journal app.
Hugh Grant has become a well-oiled parody in comedies. Thanks to his brilliant work in “Paddington 2,” he knows how to play bad guys without breaking a sweat. In “Dungeons and Dragons: Honor Among Thieves,” he heads down the same path but doesn’t quite goose it the way he could.
Why didn’t producers of the “Fast and Furious” franchise think of Jason Momoa before now? In the 10th edition, “Fast X,” he slides in as a multi-dimensional villain who’s trying to best Dominic Toretto (Vin Diesel) in the family game. He’s the best addition since the group first staged backyard gatherings.
Rocky, after all, filled six films and got a second wind with the original “Creed.” Now, a new book has begun