
Geography Club review: mapping the teen terror of being weird
A gentle high-school drama about how little courage it actually takes to break through adolescent panicky silence and embrace everyone’s differences.

A gentle high-school drama about how little courage it actually takes to break through adolescent panicky silence and embrace everyone’s differences.

Stuns me with its scathing commentary on the real world today, wrapped up in what is some of the most delicious, most comic-booky fantasy ever.

Excellent performances by Clive Owen and Billy Crudup can’t disguise the fact that there’s absolutely nothing here we haven’t seen too many times before.

Could be the most realistic depiction of the horribleness and the ineffectiveness of institutional incarceration that I’ve ever seen.

The bleak chic of this SF drama is intriguing, but the script that starts out smart and elegant soon slips into the shoddy and familiar.

It shouldn’t work, but it does, as wonderfully sardonic British humor and as a reminder that you’re not alone in being messed up in this insane world.
A salacious yet also tedious portrayal of a woman who would appear to confirm all the nastiest stereotypes about women.

Kermit the Frog takes on his biggest challenge yet: dual roles. And truly puts the villain in vaudevillian.

What is a Muppet? Is it something one is born? Is it something one chooses? Is it a state of mind? Is it a lifestyle?

Thinks it’s poetical and epic, and the more dramatic it thinks it’s being, the more hilariously histrionic it all is.