It will be nice to watch a disaster
movie on the big screen between all the superhero shenanigans.
Not exact matches
Stuck halfway
between James Bond and superhero
movies, the Mission: Impossible
big screen franchise sets itself apart by focusing
on two things: teamwork, and vulnerability.
While speaking with EW, Wallfisch noted that «Every now and again, you come across a
movie where the storytelling is so powerful, the subtext so visceral, the synergy
between director, narrative and actors so palpable, that as a composer you can feel the music being energized by something so much
bigger than what's just
on the
screen.»
(Man,
between this
movie, Lean
on Pete and Thoroughbreds, it's been a depressing - ass season for horses
on the
big screen.)
Falling somewhere
on the quality scale
between The Woman in Black and The Woman in Black 2: Angel of Death (as far as similar
movies from this decade go), Winchester is not really worth paying the full ticket price to see it
on the
big screen.
A more apt analogy would be
between watching
movies on a
big screen in a theater and watching them at home
on a television via a video cassette or DVD.