Tag Archives: Review

Father Mother Sister Brother Review: Simple, Quiet Jarmusch

Father Mother Sister Brother Review: Simple, Quiet Jarmusch

Jim Jarmusch’s Father Mother Sister Brother finds the director in a minor key, which is sometimes his best key. A triptych built around a series of aggressively unremarkable interactions, it feels like a film that the director might have made while waiting to make a different, bigger film. It takes place in three different cities, and at times feels like …

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WWE Clash in Paris results: McGuire’s review of Seth Rollins vs. CM Punk vs. Jey Uso vs. LA Knight for the World Hvt. Championship, John Cena vs. Logan Paul, Roman Reigns vs. Bronson Reed

WWE Clash in Paris results: McGuire’s review of Seth Rollins vs. CM Punk vs. Jey Uso vs. LA Knight for the World Hvt. Championship, John Cena vs. Logan Paul, Roman Reigns vs. Bronson Reed

By Colin McGuire, ProWrestling.net Staffer (@McGMondays) WWE Clash in ParisParis, France at Paris La Défense ArenaStreamed live August 31, 2025 live on Peacock Michael Cole welcomed everyone into the show as images of Paris were shown. Fans inside the arena held up colored paper that combined to form one big France flag. Jey Uso, CM Punk, LA Knight, The Vision, …

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Kirby and the Forgotten Land: Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Review

Kirby and the Forgotten Land: Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Review

Kirby and the Forgotten Land: Nintendo Switch 2 Edition Released: August 28th, 2025 Developer: HAL Laboratory With Kirby and the Forgotten Land, Nintendo intends to justify charging $79.99 for a last generation game, a vulgar stunt it also pulled with the Legend of Zelda’s Switch outings. Unlike those two, you can’t even get a “free” upgrade by joining Nintendo’s subscription services, …

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‘Father Mother Sister Brother’ Review: Jim Jarmusch’s Family Triptych

‘Father Mother Sister Brother’ Review: Jim Jarmusch’s Family Triptych

Jim Jarmusch has been doing his idiosyncratic thing for so long we sometimes take him for granted. But then he comes along with a film as delicate and lovely, as singular and perfectly realized as Father Mother Sister Brother and quietly floors you. What a pleasure to see a study of family relationships so entirely unconcerned with banal platitudes, emotional …

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Father Mother Sister Brother review – Blanchett and Rampling pick at family guilt in Jarmusch’s delectable triptych | Venice film festival

Father Mother Sister Brother review – Blanchett and Rampling pick at family guilt in Jarmusch’s delectable triptych | Venice film festival

Jim Jarmusch has made anthology films before: Mystery Train (1989), Night on Earth (1991), Coffee and Cigarettes (2003). In fact, he could claim to be the pre-eminent specialist in this now very unfashionable movie form. But with his new one, a deeply pleasing and gently quietist triptych on the subject of family, he is giving us something new and personal. …

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Far more than just a slim foldable – Honor Magic V5 review – Notebookcheck

Far more than just a slim foldable – Honor Magic V5 review – Notebookcheck

Far more than just a slim foldable – Honor Magic V5 review  Notebookcheck Honor Magic V5 review: fantastic foldable phone that needs better Android software | Smartphones  The Guardian I Tested Honor’s Rival to Samsung’s Z Fold 7 and It’s a Skinny Powerhouse  CNET Honor’s Magic V5 is the thinnest foldable yet, but that’s not why it matters  The Verge Samsung’s hit Galaxy Z …

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Sabrina Carpenter: Man’s Best Friend review – smut and stunning craft from pop’s best in show | Sabrina Carpenter

Sabrina Carpenter: Man’s Best Friend review – smut and stunning craft from pop’s best in show | Sabrina Carpenter

In June, Sabrina Carpenter announced her seventh album, Man’s Best Friend; its artwork depicts Carpenter on her hands and knees, an unseen man grasping a handful of her hair. It instantly caused an uproar online – most notably among Carpenter’s young fans, who weren’t on Tumblr in 2015, or weren’t aware of the way the Sun newspaper wrote about Madonna …

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Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere movie review (2025)

Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere movie review (2025)

Scott Cooper’s moody, introspective musical biopic “Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere” begins on rocky ground. Opening in Freehold, New Jersey circa 1957, with a lacquer of black and white to prove the point, we witness an 8-year-old Springsteen (Matthew Anthony Pellicano) climbing into his mother’s car to fetch his drunkard father Dutch (Stephen Graham) from the bar. Later that night, …

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