‘Tyler Perry’s Joe’s College Road Trip’ Review: Grandpa Knows Best
Madea only has a few minutes of screen time, but old man Joe has enough attitude to fuel this movie and then some.
Madea only has a few minutes of screen time, but old man Joe has enough attitude to fuel this movie and then some.
In this goofy B-movie throwback, it’s Liam Neeson to the rescue as a weary, tough-talking bioterror operative.
Two longtime friends time-travel back to 2008 to pursue their performing dreams in this likably daft comedy.
The actor and Jacob Elordi play the tortured lovers from the Emily Brontë classic in this florid, overstuffed version by Emerald Fennell.
Mamoru Hosoda’s animated film about a fierce princess is a genderbent fantasy version of “Hamlet.”
Two sons accompany their father for the day in a poignant and bittersweet Nigerian debut film.
Gore Verbinski returns with a weird, wild movie about stopping a rogue A.I., for the 117th time.
Stephen Curry lends his voice to this visually dynamic animated film that treats every basketball game like a roller coaster action set piece.
Despite a solid cast and pedigree of its own, a Los Angeles crime saga borrows all its best moves from Michael Mann.
Juliette Lewis plays a woman whose soul inhabits a bespoke armchair in Amanda Kramer’s cinematic specialty item.
Framed as a sports tale, “Queen of Chess,” directed by Rory Kennedy, recounts the life of Judit Polgar, who battled sexism as much as rival players.
The final installment in the trilogy reboot of “The Strangers,” a genuinely terrifying 2008 home invasion film, brings the masked nonsense to a close.
The Galician director Oliver Laxe delivers a mesmerizing thriller about a man’s search for his lost daughter, set amid raves in the punishing Sahara.
Shot in Iraq, this period piece depicts a young girl’s efforts to prepare for a celebration of Saddam Hussein’s birthday.
A shy young man is captivated by a hunky biker in this bold, funny and achingly tenderhearted B.D.S.M. romance.
This nearly three hour historical drama became Japan’s highest grossing live action film of all time, and for mostly good reason.
Luc Besson’s extravagantly silly twist on the timeless monster, played by Caleb Landry Jones, is deliciously operatic but ultimately a letdown.
A nonbinary teenager pays a visit to their grandfather, a gay professor, in this intergenerational story that slips from sweet into cloying.
The Spanish actor Carmen Maura shines as a widow forced to sell her childhood home in Morocco in this film by Maryam Touzani.
This triumph of low-budget filmmaking will shimmer for a week at Brooklyn Academy of Music.
The theories laid out by the aerospace engineer Gentry Lee in this new documentary may blow your mind.
After being left at the altar, Matt (Kevin James) finds himself alone in Rome. But don’t worry, he’ll quickly find an Italian woman to fall for him.
Directed by Brett Ratner, the documentary shows a woman deeply concerned with her appearance who rarely lets us behind her facade.
Suzannah Herbert’s film centers on antebellum mansions and the narratives the owners want to tell about the South.
A teenage girl gets stuck on an island with a rogue MI5 agent. Then, international assassins come after them.
This postapocalyptic father-daughter story shamelessly recombines overused ideas.
A mousy employee and her odious boss battle for dominance in this jubilantly wicked thriller.
A once-promising writer learns some painful lessons in a tragicomic Colombian tale.
Sonny starts bringing in new lovers, so Chester finds a solution: He starts hiring prostitutes.
Omar Epps struggles to grant this gangland Chicago religious drama divine quality.
The movie glances at artistic concerns like autonomy and authenticity while gleefully testing the divide between a public and a private self.
A family navigates the year after parents separate in this funny, surrealist Icelandic drama.
This slow-burn tale of a tennis pro and a couple gets the low-grade melancholy of a resort town right.
Jason Momoa and Dave Bautista play half brothers on a quest for justice in this lean, mean buddy action flick.
This film about a fieldworker trying to make it in music offers a Mexican American spin on underdog dreamer movies like “8 Mile.”
Chris Pratt plays a man accused of killing his wife in this witless action-thriller where harsh justice is dispensed by artificial intelligence.
This latest installment in the video game movie franchise looks like it’s meant to be played.
In this dreary thriller, an ex-con faces escalating dangers and familial strife when she attempts to regain control of her drug operation.
The erotic film, first shown in 1994, finds room for sweetness with its kink.
Claire Foy stars along with a goshawk in an adaptation of Helen MacDonald’s award-winning memoir.
Leslie Iwerks’s documentary is a captivating look at the creative and logistical challenges of building a beloved theme park on California farmland.
A primary schoolteacher in Russia documents the government’s efforts to teach students pro-war messages.
In this documentary, Smart tells the frightening narrative of her 2002 kidnapping at age 14, in Utah.
This documentary chronicles the reboot and reopening in Las Vegas of the acrobatic show “O,” which shutdown during the pandemic.
This enlightening, troubling documentary chronicles life (and death) among residents in a long-term care facility during the heights of the pandemic.
Stakeholders including Patti LuPone and Lynn Nottage share their real-time reactions to New York theater’s shutdown and reopening in Amy Rice’s documentary.
The filmmaker David Siev chronicles his family’s struggle to keep their Michigan restaurant afloat through the pandemic in this hermetic documentary.