Wes Craven on Why Horror Is Like Porn

Despite some reluctance, Wes Craven is a name-brand filmmaker. The phrase “Wes Craven Presents” comes with certain expectations thanks to the financial success of the Scream franchise and The Hills Have Eyes series before that. But what cemented Craven’s reputation is A Nightmare on Elm Street, a deathless cycle of…

Where to See the 2014 Oscar-Nominated Films in Miami

The 2014 Oscar nominations were announced yesterday, and if you’re a born-and-raised Miamian, you’re justifiably pissed. No love for local actor Oscar Isaac of Inside Llewyn Davis? Go home, Academy, you’re drunk. It’s enough to make you want to quit this awards season altogether. But if you’re a real movie…

A Found-Footage Attempt at Rosemary’s Baby in Devil’s Due

In Devil’s Due, co-directors Matt Bettinelli-Olpin and Tyler Gillett (V/H/S) and first-time screenwriter Lindsay Devlin offer an uninspired found-footage riff on Roman Polanski’s demon-spawn classic, Rosemary’s Baby (1968). On their Dominican Republic honeymoon, the squeakily innocent Samantha (Allison Miller) and Zach (Zach Gilford) are drugged by a cult who draw…

Oscars 2014: Miami Actor Oscar Isaac Snubbed For an Academy Award

Oscar Isaac, the Miami-raised star of Inside Llewyn Davis, has already had a dizzyingly successful year. His awkward, often off-putting performance in the Coen brothers’ film has earned him a Golden Globe nomination and rave reviews from pretty much every film critic in the country. But that wasn’t enough to…

50 Things We Learned From the 2013 Year in Movies

This morning, this year’s Oscar nominations will be announced, also known as national Gah! What Were Those Idiot Voters Thinking Day. We can’t wait, so in the meantime, we give you this: 1. Marvel Films has become Taco Bell, with plenty of sour creamy, cheesy wrap-up menu items scheduled through…

Fiennes’ Prickly The Invisible Woman Is Hard Not to Love

A tale of love complicated — if not thwarted — by prior responsibilities, intractable barriers, and the rigid high-society norms that frustrate its Victorian characters’ attempts to live as they so desperately want, The Invisible Woman finds Ralph Fiennes proving as adept behind the camera as he is in front…

The Legend of Hercules Boasts Swords and Great Pecs

January! Just the time to snuggle up with a 3-D sword-and-pectoral extravaganza. And although some of its more imaginative plot details would make Edith Hamilton blanch, Renny Harlin’s The Legend of Hercules fulfills every silly, flimsy promise it makes in the first place: There are lots of battles (though rather…