The Greatest (review)
First-time writer-director Shana Feste has made a wise, insightful movie about family, grief, and how awful and how wonderful it is to discover that life goes on after someone you love dies.
First-time writer-director Shana Feste has made a wise, insightful movie about family, grief, and how awful and how wonderful it is to discover that life goes on after someone you love dies.
Made of spoilers. Don’t read until you’ve seen the episode unless you don’t care to have it spoiled for you.
Funny and smart and poignant and real and universal. It’s one of the best movies about family I’ve ever seen…
Better than *Toy Story 3.* Really.
See it if you love movies with compelling characters doing fascinating things and overcoming tremendous obstacles to get to an immensely satisfying end. You know: the things that movies are supposed to do, but rarely seem to manage.
Made of spoilers. Don’t read until you’ve seen the episode unless you don’t care to have it spoiled for you.
The sparkly vampire guy and the shirtless werewolf guy, they’re still fighting over perfect, perfect Bella, whose perfection extends to a delicate and supposedly adorable feminine idiocy…
Made of spoilers. Don’t read until you’ve seen the episode.
Tilda Swinton, matriarch of a ridiculously wealthy Milan family, has sex with a man not her husband. And she *likes* it. So she must be punished.
Made of spoilers. Don’t read until you’ve seen the episode.