Josh Reviews Curb Your Enthusiasm: Season 11
I thought for a while that Curb Your Enthusiasm was over (there was a loooong wait between seasons eight and nine, and about a two and a half-year pause between seasons nine and ten). And yet here was season eleven, coming relatively quickly after season ten, despite the pandemic.
Josh Reviews Invincible Season One
Invincible is a new Amazon animated series, adapting the comic book series written by Robert Kirkman and illustrated by Cory Walker & Ryan Ottley. The series focuses on Mark Grayson, whose father Nolan is the Superman-like super-hero called Omni-Man. When Mark turns 17, he d
Josh’s Favorite Movies of 2020 — Part One!
I hope you enjoyed my look back at my favorite TV series of 2020! And now, let’s dive into my favorite movies of 2020: 15. Happy Happy Joy Joy: The Ren & Stimpy Story — I was a huge fan of The Ren & Stimpy Show back when it first started airing on Nickelodeon
Josh Reviews An American Pickle
In HBO Max’s An American Pickle, Seth Rogen plays dual roles as Herschel Greenbaum and his great-grandson Ben Greenbaum. In 1919, Herschel and his wife Sarah leave the shtetl of Schlupsk (fleeing Russian Cossacks) and emigrate to the United States. Herschel gets a menial j
Josh Reviews Jon Favreau’s remake of The Lion King
It seems like it was just a few weeks ago that I was writing about the live-action remake of Aladdin, and stating that I don’t see any creatively interesting rationale behind Disney’s current predilection for remaking so many of their classic animated films in live-action.
Josh Reviews The Disaster Artist
James Franco’s The Disaster Artist chronicles the making of The Room, the 2003 film that is widely regarded as one of the worst movies ever made. The Disaster Artist is based on Greg Sestero and Tom Bissell’s book of the same name, which depicts the unlikely friendsh
The Top Twenty Movies of 2016 — Part Three!
My list of my Top Twenty Movies of 2016 continues! Click here for numbers twenty through sixteen and click here for numbers fifteen through eleven. 10. Sing Street — Writer/director John Carney, who wrote and directed the marvelous film Once (which was then made into a Broad
From the Blu-Ray Shelf: Josh Reviews Neighbors 2: Sorority Rising
I enjoyed the first Neighbors. I wouldn’t call it a comedy classic, but it was a very funny film with a great cast. I loved the Seth Rogen-Rose Byrne combo, and all the frat boys (Zac Efron, Dave Franco, Christopher Mintz-Plasse, Jerrod Carmichael) were fun. So I was interested
Josh Reviews Sausage Party
Seth Rogen’s animated film Sausage Party tells a story of the secret inner life had by all of the food items that together inhabit a supermarket. Seth Rogen plays Frank, a sausage, and Kristen Wiig plays his girlfriend Brenda, a bun. Together, Frank and Brenda — along
Josh Reviews Steve Jobs
The film Steve Jobs, written by Aaron Sorkin and directed by Danny Boyle, is divided into three vignettes, each taking place in the moments before Steve Jobs will go on-stage to announce the launch of a new product. The first vignette is in 1984, at the launch of the Macintosh compu