After diving into a world where a technological uprising threatens to end the global population, ‘Y2K’ concludes on a ...
Common Sense Media also reviews “SpongeBob and Sandy’s Country Christmas” and “That Christmas.” ...
As cartoonish as characters can get, Martell grounds the emotional core with his inherent vulnerability an understated ...
In his directorial debut, Kyle Mooney helms Y2K, a disaster comedy horror film that fuses turn-of-the-century paranoia with a ...
In “Y2K,” Mooney applies his awkward character template to the story itself, and the result is — well, awkward. While Mooney’s past work puts ungrounded characters in grounded situations ...
“Y2K,” a new horror comedy about digital devices ... “Where are the flying cars they promised us?” one character asks. Congratulations, millennials: You’re officially old enough to ...
I notoriously hate horror movies. I am the buzzkill who will tell her friends to never, ever, put one on. I blindly walked ...
But it doesn’t seem feasible, so they just hit the video store (hey, remember video stores?) to rent a movie and then the ...
Both are plots, characters, and lessons that could have taken place at any time or any place and use their setting as a unique backdrop. “Y2K” does none of these things; “Y2K” is a complete surrender ...