Movie ‘Merry Christmas’ Review: A Night Shrouded in Tedious Mystery by DIGITAL TIMES 2 years ago written by DIGITAL TIMES 2 years ago 0 comment Share 0FacebookTwitterPinterestRedditWhatsappEmail 198 You Might Be Interested In ‘Springsteen: Deliver Me From Nowhere’ Review – Familiar Tropes and Lack of Style Create Underwhelming Biopic about ‘The Boss’ ‘Agatha Christie’s Seven Dials’ Review: A Carefully Mannered Murder Mystery ‘L2: Empuraan’ Review: A Franchise Vehicle Leveraging Mohanlal’s Never-Ending Aura ‘Anatomy Of A Fall’ Review: The Psychological Ordeal Of A Toxic Marriage ‘The Old Guard 2’ Review – Long-awaited Netflix Sequel Packs a Punch ‘Nobody 2’ Review: A Formulaic Sequel Saved by Bob Odenkirk’s No-Nonsense Performance and Timo Tjahjanto’s Visceral Action-Comedy Mayhem ‘Merry Christmas’ Review: A Night Shrouded in Tedious Mystery | Talking Films Previous Story ‘Poor Things’ Review: This Twisted Take On A Classic Story Is Perfect In Every Way Next Story ‘The Settlers’ Review: Brutal and Bold Filmmaking At It’s Finest Source link You Might Be Interested In ‘Despatch’ Review: A Well-Built Thriller, Yet Falling Short ‘Love Hurts’ Review: Ke Huy Quan Goes Jackie Chan Mode in This Visceral But Uneven Action Comedy ‘The Goat Life’ Review: Blessy Struggles to Elevate Benyamin’s Aadujeevitham ‘Captain America: Brave New World’ Review: A Well-Acted, Back-to-Basics Continuation of the MCU ‘Monster’ Review: A Challenging Yet Accessible Tale of Growing Up Review: ‘Kalki 2898 AD’ Aims to Build Franchise Loyalty Share 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestRedditWhatsappEmail DIGITAL TIMES You may also like ‘Ready or Not 2’ Review: Here I Come... ‘Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man’ Review: It’s Far... ‘Aadu 3’ Review: A Three-Hour Teaser for the... ‘Project Hail Mary’ Review – A Sci-Fi Epic... ‘The Bride!’ Review: Jessie Buckley’s Unhinged Performance Comes... ‘War Machine’ Review: It’s Man vs. Machine in...
Previous Story ‘Poor Things’ Review: This Twisted Take On A Classic Story Is Perfect In Every Way Next Story ‘The Settlers’ Review: Brutal and Bold Filmmaking At It’s Finest