(It's a darn good thing I have impolite friends, or I'd be truly alone in
my little cinematic world.)
BOB MONDELLO, BYLINE: Filmmaker Wes Anderson makes contraptions as much as he makes movies,
little cinematic worlds that look as if they've been conceived as dollhouses and that operate by their own peculiar rules.
Not exact matches
It was The Exorcist and The French Connection that put William Friedkin on the
cinematic top of the
world, but the attention - worthy films in this filmmaker's dossier are too many to mention in this clumsy
little introduction.
It's been a while since the Marvel
Cinematic Universe's Luke Cage got a chance to just go home to sit back, relax, and enjoy a
little time to himself — he's been busy saving the
world and whatnot.
Once you're past the (admittedly cool) opening
cinematics, you're thrown into this
world with many questions and a game that does
little to answer them.
The placing, Saturday morning cartoon
cinematics pull you into an equally attractive pixel - art
world, the place each
little element is probably going one thing vital out of your childhood, at the least should you're over 30 years outdated.