Bleed
Debuary in March!
Hello, everyone, and welcome once again to the internets movie review column that has never worked at a place that had posters for Full Moon Entertainment movies on the wall, The Gratuitous B-Movie Column, and I am your host Bryan Kristopowitz. In this issue, issue number five hundred and eighty-six, I celebrate Debuary in March with the low budget sort of slasher/mystery horror flick
Bleed, which was released towards the end of December, 2002.
Bleed
Bleed, originally known as
The Murder Club and directed by Dennis Petersen and Devin Hamilton (Hamilton also wrote the script), is a bizarre mega low budget mystery movie that occasionally resembles a sort of slasher movie. It’s an odd mix that generally works right up until the end, when the movie’s resolution goes off the rails because, I guess, Petersen and Hamilton wanted to end the movie with a twist. The movie doesn’t need that twist at all. It
Robert De Niro Thriller Wash Me in the River Set for Spring 2022 Release
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몬스터 헌터 , 게임 고증·완성도보다 이게 더 문제
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Detective Chinatown 3 Review: Record-Setting Mystery-Comedy Tackles Tokyo Detective Chinatown 3 Review: Record-Setting Mystery-Comedy Tackles Tokyo
The third chapter in Chen Sicheng s mega-hit series is fun on the fringes but undercooked in the center.
Richard Kuipers, provided by
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Director: Chen Sicheng
With: Wang Baoqiang, Liu Haoran,
Satoshi Tsumabuki, Tony Jaa, Tomokazu Miura, Masami Nagasawa, Tadanobu Asano, Shota Sometani, Hirayama Motokazu, Shang Yuxian, Zhang Zifeng, Cheng Xiao, Chen Zheyuan. (Mandarin, Japanese, English, Thai dialogue)
Running time: Running time: 136 MIN.
Courtesy of WanDa Pictures
The mega-successful Chinese franchise about a mismatched detective duo tackling baffling crimes in foreign destinations continues with a wildly uneven caper set in Tokyo. With performances, plotting and visuals amped up to 11 as per usual, this hyperactive combination of Sherlock Holmes-type sleuthing and Three Stooges-style slapstick comedy offe