Skip to content

The American site for cinema, TV and Netflix | Today is : August 25, 2025

  • IN THEATERS
  • NEWS
  • INTERVIEWS
  • ABOUT US

NathanaelCHood

  • Featured Review,Festivals,Tribeca

    Tribeca Film Festival| “Nerdland”

    Ever notice that it’s almost always a bad sign when an R-rated animated movie brags about being an R-rated animated movie? The one exception might be SOUTH PARK: BIGGER, LONGER AND UNCUT (1999), but other than that the pickings are slim. I had this realization watching Chris Prynoski’s NERDLAND, a very graphic animated comedy filled to the brim with boobs, boners, and buttholes. The first feature film by animation house Titmouse

    April 22, 2016
  • Festivals,Tribeca

    Tribeca Film Festival | “Life, Animated”

    I think it was the moment when Gilbert Gottfried showed [...]

    April 14, 2017
  • Festivals,Tribeca

    Tribeca Film Festival “High-rise”

    There were walkouts at my screening of Ben Wheatley’s HIGH [...]

    April 14, 2017
  • Featured Review,Festivals,Tribeca

    Tribeca Film Festival “The first Monday in May”

    Andrew Rossi’s new documentary THE FIRST MONDAY IN MAY is gorgeous, sumptuous. It’s also undercooked. The film follows the inception, creation, and opening gala for the Metropolitan Museum of Art’s 2015 fashion exhibition “China: Through the Looking Glass.” The exhibit itself was a massive celebration and rumination on the tenuous relationship between Western fashion and Chinese culture curated by the renowned

    April 22, 2016
  • Featured Review,In Theaters Now,Movies

    From Havana with glitter and love, it’s VIVA !

    People walk all over Jesus, partially because he can’t fight back, partially because he lets them. His best friend is a prostitute who shakes him down for money and hogs his measly apartment to service clients. People have an uncanny ability to not notice him when he walks in a room—unless they need him for something, of course. The gay, femmy son of a famous ex-boxer, Jesus makes ends meet turning the occasional trick and fixing the wigs of Havana transvestites

    April 14, 2017
  • Featured Review,In Theaters Now,Movies

    The Revenant

    Of course, the historical Hugh Glass, legendary nineteenth-century frontiersman left for dead by his fellows after surviving a horrific grizzly bear attack, never had a half-Native American son. But neither did he violently confront the traitor who left him for dead and murdered the aforementioned imagined son. It’s also improbable that during his journey he was rescued and aided by a lone Pawnee elder. We know this because we have authentic

    April 14, 2017
  • Featured Review,In Theaters Now,Movies

    THANK YOU FOR PLAYING provided “some of the most heart-breaking moments at the last Tribeca Festival

    Every year, thousands of gamers, programmers, and journalists converge at the Penny Arcade eXpo (PAX) to celebrate video game culture. As one of the world’s premier gaming conventions, the booths and hallways are choked with endless screens of pixelated carnage and mayhem. All except for one, that is. At this booth, a quiet middle-aged man guides players towards a video game that isn’t about killing and destruction but survival and life.

    May 3, 2015
Previous345Next

The American site for cinema, TV and Netflix

Copyright © 2006 - 2025 Screen Comment

Page load link

Press “ESC” key to close

Not boring movie news

Get news from Screen Comment delivered to your inbox

Invalid email address
We promise not to spam you. You can unsubscribe at any time
Thanks for subscribing to Screen Comment News ! Please check your email for further instructions.
Go to Top