On April 14th, 1912, widowed preacher John Harper kissed his six-year-old daughter Nana on the forehead before lowering her down into a lifeboat. “I’ll see you again someday,” he called to her, as he disappeared into the chaos on board …

Cinema Craptastíque: Titanic Read more »

The latest in a series of essays about classic, awful films. Paul Verhoeven’s Starship Troopers (1997) holds a special place in my heart right next to those animatronic singing fish people hang over their mantles. Difference is, the plastic fish could serve a …

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  Sequential Tart is a webzine devoted to comics and culture. They review comics (print and web), movies, music, books, etc. Maureen Landers has written a review of Gabe #1 for the March issue. It’s a very positive review of this creator’s …

Gabe #1 Reviewed at SequentialTart.com Read more »

Good afternoon, folks, and thanks for joining us here at the Charles Nelson Reilly Theatre in the maintenance block behind the Warner Brothers studio lot. On behalf of New Line Cinema and director Lawrence Guterman, I welcome you to this …

Scenes From a Test Screening of Son of the Mask Read more »

Who hasn’t read Mark Twain’s classic Tom Sawyer and thought to themselves, after closing the back cover and placing the book gently on a nearby table, “Now that was a fine work of classic American fiction, but it just felt like something …

Cinema Craptastíque: The League of Extraordinary Gentlemen Read more »

The first in a new series of essays about classic, horrible films. At some point in the early 1990’s, James Cameron must have decided he was coming off as too talented. After directing four completely watchable action films (The Terminator, Aliens, …

Cinema Craptastíque: True Lies Read more »