One of the most subtle moments in Reagan, the biopic starring Dennis Quaid as the 40th President of the United States, comes at the first inauguration sequence, with a close-up of Ronald Reagan’s hand on an open Bible, revealing a margin note in 2 Chronicles: “A wonderful verse for the healing of a nation.
- 8/30/2024
- by Alex Lei
- avclub.com
Life In The Dreamhouse “A Smidge Of Midge” Screenshot: Arc Productions By all accounts, the new live-action Barbie film has a delightfully subversive edge to it, simultaneously poking fun at and paying homage to the iconic fashion doll and the toy line based around her. It’s a clever approach...
- 7/19/2023
- by Cindy White
- avclub.com
Barbie: Life In The Dreamhouse, Margot Robbie in BarbieImage: Arc Productions, Warner Bros.
By all accounts, the new live-action Barbie film has a delightfully subversive edge to it, simultaneously poking fun at and paying homage to the iconic fashion doll and the toy line based around her. It’s a...
By all accounts, the new live-action Barbie film has a delightfully subversive edge to it, simultaneously poking fun at and paying homage to the iconic fashion doll and the toy line based around her. It’s a...
- 7/19/2023
- by Cindy White
- avclub.com
Everyone wants their wedding to be special.
Mia (Kelly Gates) wants her wedding to Dalvero (David Pregram) to be so fantastic and memorable that it will launch a new career.
Camp Wedding to the rescue!
Directed and by Greg Emetaz with Cara Consilvio, Camp Wedding explores the traditional horror camp genre "in a world of ubiquitous social media and text communication."
That is the world we live in today. Friendships aren't maintained in person but through text messages and Facebook and Instagram posts.
Those friends you've known all your life will be relative strangers when you all get together again for something as significant as a wedding. Really, is there any other reason to connect these days than a required gathering?
Camp Wedding starts with Mia, her best guy, Gore (Sean Hankinson), and her friends Flynn (Cadden Jones) and Alexis (Melissa Roth) heading to Camp Pocumtuck, which Mia scored via Airbnb.
Mia (Kelly Gates) wants her wedding to Dalvero (David Pregram) to be so fantastic and memorable that it will launch a new career.
Camp Wedding to the rescue!
Directed and by Greg Emetaz with Cara Consilvio, Camp Wedding explores the traditional horror camp genre "in a world of ubiquitous social media and text communication."
That is the world we live in today. Friendships aren't maintained in person but through text messages and Facebook and Instagram posts.
Those friends you've known all your life will be relative strangers when you all get together again for something as significant as a wedding. Really, is there any other reason to connect these days than a required gathering?
Camp Wedding starts with Mia, her best guy, Gore (Sean Hankinson), and her friends Flynn (Cadden Jones) and Alexis (Melissa Roth) heading to Camp Pocumtuck, which Mia scored via Airbnb.
- 8/28/2021
- by Carissa Pavlica
- TVfanatic
The horror comedy Camp Wedding is coming to Digital platforms, this August. The film builds on the insane premise that an Airbnb has been built on a location, where several tragedies have taken place. Campers have drown, natives have been massacred and witches have been burned all at this haunted location; now, a wedding is set to take place. But, these guests might want to reschedule. Camp Wedding stars: Kelley Gates, Sean Hankinson and Cadden Jones. The film's latest trailer and release details are hosted here. The film has been inspired by a real life wedding. Executive producer and writer Cara Consilvio's wedding took place at a summer camp. But, her experience was hopefully less bloody than this one. The official story tells a tale of woe. As a wedding is set to begin, the event planners are less than prepared. Events begin to take a wrong turn as the guests begin to disappear.
- 6/27/2019
- by [email protected] (Unknown)
- 28 Days Later Analysis
A send-up of obsessive food culture, Foodies pits everyman Porter (Sean Hankinson) against his fiancee Moose's overbearing, hipster friends, who gather each week to eat snooty food together, largely so they can go home and blog about it later. A show about a group of pretentious jerks who meet weekly to fawn over exotic recipes sounds promising, but based on the pilot, I'm not sure I have any desire to spend more time in this world. This show is, to but it bluntly, filled with hate, and to be honest, I found it off-putting. Porter hates these ludicrous hipsters and doesn't want to be there. The hipsters hate Porter because he's an uncultured swine. And there you have it. There's nothing redemptive about it, and it just starts to feel mean-spirited. It seems like having Moose present - the go-between who is friends with all these people - would balance...
- 3/15/2011
- by Lon Harris
- Tubefilter.com
Web shows about food are becoming so common I think I’ve lost count—VendrTV, Food Star, Cooking with Nonna, 12-Second Cocktails—but scripted comedies about hard core foodies? Those were sadly missing until now. Thankfully one new series, Foodies, explores the conflicted machinations of a foodie culture emboldened by dozens of competition reality shows and celebrity chefs. The American foodie is the modern derivation of the post-war French culinary zealot that infiltrated kitchens of a newly prosperous middle class. Only now it has anexed itself farther from “Anyone Can Cook” and Julia Child, morphing instead into a refined form of geek in constant distrust of the mainstream palate. This of course leads to a yuppie one-upmanship that finds even the sanest amongst us heading to Williams-Sonoma insisting on Mauviel copper saute pans instead of (gasp) that copper core nonsense. Grant shot the project under the AFTRA new media contract,...
- 3/10/2011
- by Marc Hustvedt
- Tubefilter.com
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