Josh Reviews The King of Staten Island
In Judd Apatow’s new film, The King of Staten Island, SNL’s Pete Davidson stars as Scott, who lives at home with his widowed mother. Scott’s father was a firefighter, who died on the job when Scott was young. Scott is content to live his slacker-ish life, smoking
Josh Reviews Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of One Harley Quinn
Despite my having a very negative opinion of most of the recent DC/Warner Brothers films, including the dreadful Suicide Squad (which is where Margot Robbie’s version of Harley Quinn first appeared), I was interested in seeing Birds of Prey and the Fantabulous Emancipation of On
Josh Reviews the Series Premiere of Star Trek: Lower Decks
Star Trek: Lower Decks is the new animated series on CBS all access. It focuses on four low-ranked crew-people on a Federation Starship, the U.S.S. Ceritos, during the era of Star Trek: The Next Generation. The series is a comedy, in the vein of Rick and Morty. (The series’
News Around the Net
I miss The Good Place!! The recently-released season four blooper reel only makes me miss it more. Enjoy. Everything is fine. This is fun! A Good Omens short film, in honor of the book’s 30th anniversary, written by Neil Gaiman with Michael Sheen and David Tennant repris
Josh Review the DC Animated Film: Apokolips War
Justice League Dark: Apokolips War seems to be the finale of the “New 52” style continuity of animated films that began with 2014’s Justice League: War. Here in Apokolips War, the story circles back around to Darkseid (who was the main villain in Justice League: Wa
Josh Reviews Shazam!
I missed Shazam! when it was released to theatres last year. I’d been burned out on one bad DC/Warner Brothers live-action movie after another, and while this one looked interesting, I didn’t rush out to see it. I recently watched the film on blu-ray, and I enjoyed it!
Josh Reviews the Animated Adaptation of Superman: Red Son
The direct to blu-ray/DVD DC animated film Red Son is an adaptation of the three-issue mini-series by Mark Millar, Dave Johnson and Kilian Plunkett. That “Elseworlds” story asks the tantalizing premise: what if young Kal-El had been raised in communist Russia rather than
Josh Reviews His Dark Materials Season One
Philip Pullman’s fantasy trilogy His Dark Materials was originally published between 1995-2000. The first book, The Golden Compass, had previously been adapted into a mediocre movie back in 2007. Now, the BBC and HBO have adapted that first book, The Golden Compass, into an
Josh Reviews the Re-Edited Fourth Season of Arrested Development
The first three seasons of Arrested Development still stand tall among the greatest comedy TV shows ever made. Last year I re-watched those three seasons in their entirety, and they remain brilliant, with a dense layering of joke upon joke upon joke unlike any other TV show I’
Josh Reviews Into the Unknown: The Making of Frozen II
Not long after I finished watching Disney Gallery: The Mandalorian, my entire family and I watched and enjoyed another Disney+ “making-of” series: the six-episode Into the Unknown: The Making of Frozen II. This six-episode series, directed by Megan Harding, is an incredibl