Josh Reviews Poker Face Season Two!
Back in 2023, I thought the first season of Poker Face was a delightful revelation! The show starred Natasha Lyonne (coming off of another amazing TV show, Russian Doll) and was overseen by writer/director Rian Johnson (Knives Out, Glass Onion), and it was spectacular. The show b
Announcing Batya’s Unicorn & Chutzpah! A New Jewish Comics Anthology!
I’m excited to share two big new announcements! First, check out the cover for Batya’s Unicorn, my new comic book written by Arnon Shorr, available for pre-order right now! Batya’s Unicorn is a magical new entry in the Festival of Forgotten Tales series — a comic t
Josh Reviews Predator: Killer of Killers
2022’s Prey was an absolute delight — an out of nowhere kick-ass Predator sequel!! Prey was directed and co-written (with Patrick Aison) by Dan Trachtenberg, who made a number of bold choices, such as setting the film in 1719 and centering the story on a young Comanche w
Josh Reviews Spinal Tap II: The End Continues
The original 1984 This is Spinal Tap has long been one of my favorite films. I just re-watched it again last week, for the umpteenth time, and I think it still holds up remarkably well as a wonderfully funny and silly piece of filmmaking. A few of the jokes have aged poorly, but I
Josh Reviews Caught Stealing
Caught Stealing is set in New York City in 1998; Hank (Austin Butler) is living a happy life as a jovial, somewhat unreliable, slightly alcoholic bartender. He’s in an on-the-edge-of-becoming-serious relationship with a paramedic named Yvonne (Zoë Kravitz). But Hank’s
Josh Reviews The Phoenician Scheme
As The Phoenician Scheme opens, we see wealthy industrialist (and possibly also criminal/arms dealer?) Anatole “Zsa-Zsa” Korda (Benicio del Toro) narrowly survive an assassination attempt when his plane is blown up and crashes. This near-death experience prompts Zsa-Zsa
Josh Reviews Mr. Harrigan’s Phone
I recently bought and read If it Bleeds, a collection of four novellas by Stephen King, because I knew I wanted to see the movie The Life of Chuck, and I wanted to read the original story first. (I’m glad I did; I enjoyed both the story and the movie adaptation.) The first s
Comic Book Programming Connected with the MET Opera’s Adaptation of The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay!
I’m excited to share that I’m running two comic book workshops for kids in connection with The Metropolitan Opera’s upcoming adaptation of Michael Chabon’s incredible Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The Amazing Adventures of Kavalier & Clay! That wonderful novel tells the
Josh Reviews The Life of Chuck
When I was in high school, I read a Stephen King story in an English class. I knew who Stephen King was, of course, but I hadn’t read any of his novels. He was very much a horror author in my mind, and that didn’t interest me back then. But then I read this short [&h