The Voice of Hind Rajab
“The Voice of Hind Rajab” exists not just as a clarion call to say never again, it also asks you to truly sit with this violence.
“The Voice of Hind Rajab” exists not just as a clarion call to say never again, it also asks you to truly sit with this violence.
Great sequels don’t just repeat, they build. This one treads beautifully-rendered water.
Funny, scary, and cleverly imagined, Bryan Fuller’s directorial debut channels ’80s horror comedies like “Fright Night” and “Tremors.”
Its optimism is so refreshing, its dialogue so smart, and its characters and performances so endearing, it well rewards a watch.
Ravishing in its command of shadow and light, but it studiously hollows out any sense of soul beneath the surface.
So much of “Influencers” works as well as it does because of Harder’s cleverly unpredictable and often remarkably funny script.
This new holiday chiller mostly idles when it should charge at its most unsound ideas.