These are all the movies and series that Don has reviewed. Read more at: Every Movie Has a Lesson.
Number of movie reviews: 711 / 711
Options
The two men of Sacramento are going through this very emotional gauntlet right before our eyes for 90-odd minutes, leading to an ultra-relatable profundity that will garner support and appreciation. Review
If the human precision isn’t impressive enough in Warfare, the production value work and rigorous filmmaking effort will galvanize and hammer that point home. Review
Thanks to the exuberant cast and the kind of contagious entertainment they dispensed, you may just come to love something you didn’t know a lick about 101 minutes earlier. Review
We’re watching a wringer that doesn’t wring us out in return because we come to understand and care so deeply for this broken woman at odds. Review
Compared to other medical-centered dramas that amp up their own kinds of manufactured peril, Audrey’s Children will not—nor should it really—be the most scintillating film of life-saving excitement. Review
We fail to see or feel the heavier point The Assessment wanted to confront us with. We’re too busy tidying up another bleak and futile mess. Review
As frightful and grisly as Majors and Magazine Dreams get, there is an unmistakable lure to their intensity and damaged textures. Majors’ narration, reactions, and jaded silent acts infuse a more layered human lost underneath the monstrous muscles and vices. He is undeniably impressive in those feats. Review
Because of all of this glowing style and sensational suspense, Black Bag is never dull, meaning Steven Soderbergh and his avant-garde arthouse tendencies are never pedestrian either. Review
When it’s all said and done, Queen of the Ring nailed the big fight feel in its 1954 climax that bookends the film, and they put on a barnburner. Review
It is a shame the rest of Picture This around Simone Ashley could not equal her level of vividness. Review
The majority of Riff Raff is a disjointed and boring intersection of Vincent’s present and past families. Too wide of a pendulum is swung between reflective complications and the trigger-happy dark comedy the movies probably should have been the whole time. Review
Thanks to Gretchen Mol, Minnie Driver, and Julianna Marguiles, Millers in Marriage stages a performative pageant of strength and sentiment. Review
Thankfully, Anya Taylor-Joy and Miles Teller look just as good sharing lusty gazes as they do with a deadly rifle on their shoulder while being put through their paces by stunt coordinator Brycen Counts and fight coordinator Shahaub Roudbari. Review
It goes to show that, even with a tremendously polished and solid effort that quite honestly sells itself on brand name alone, Marvel still can’t help themselves. Review
Those who lean to and shine with the positive latter will be rewarded with a lovely odyssey of warmth fighting back bleakness. Review
The linchpin of the new release dramedy Suze isn’t the nicknamed middle-aged female title character played by comedienne and Saturday Night Live alum Michaela Watkins. The overall course is made unexpectedly and tremendously more interesting by the inclusion of a celebrated archetype that’s harder to pull off than audiences realize: the himbo. Review
With its idyllic morals and rural accoutrements, Green and Gold champions hopeful and wholesome vibes. Review
Surging with peppy vibrancy, Dog Man is a delightful and easy-going blast fit for entire fleets of minivans and family sedans arriving at multiplexes this winter. Review
While Wish You Were Here may not fully succeed for many, she deserves more chances in the big chair. Review
Those astute and excellent creative choices put strength on the restorative over the reactive, because, in the end, things can get better, and that journey has led to over 10 festival jury prizes Anna’s important film. Review
Whether it was written on the page or pulled by the actress fleshing out a character for comic relief trying to become wiser by the end of the movie, the physical neuroses, teacher-’splaining rants, and preposterous decision-making bring down the film’s zest detrimentally. Review
Somewhere in Montana reveals its true dramatic colors which are mature, pertinent, and valuable in their intrinsic quality. Review
Better than many works by peers and contemporaries, Nickel Boys longs for us to hold dear the bonds of protective brotherhood with a fascinating filmic experience. Review
Because of its empathetic and transformative journey, The Fire Inside is engrossing entertainment perfect for this time of the year and stands out as a must-see sports film in an era with a dearth of quality in the genre. Shields and Crutchfield repped for their folks. Review
What is Veboli?
Veboli provides personal movie advice, so you can easily choose the right movie to watch. Learn more
Stay up to date?
Read the Veboli blog
Got a question?
Send us a message
English