‘Red Dog: True Blue’ MOVIE REVIEW: Great Family-Friendly Viewing
Continues the legacy sincerely with an emphasis on modesty and greater attention to character development.
Continues the legacy sincerely with an emphasis on modesty and greater attention to character development.
Not schlocky enough to be fun and not unnerving enough to be a genuine fright.
An assortment of nuanced stories, everyday characters and sometimes-uncomfortable food for thought.
A mostly good time, until it becomes clear that the set-up could only maintain its stamina for so long.
A remarkably sophisticated effort from the writer-director of ‘A Single Man’.
Despite being partly crowd-funded, the film is as smoothly produced as any Hollywood blockbuster.
The ‘Old Boy’ director scores yet again.
There’s good reason why this is, so far, the third most successful Japanese film in history.
Somehow, the very worst chapter of the lot.
Intriguing and absorbing, full of twists, deceit, drama and suspense.