Movie ‘Masters of the Universe’ Review: Travis Knight’s Big-Budget Redo Gets Overly Juvenile for its Own Good by DIGITAL TIMES 1 hour ago written by DIGITAL TIMES 1 hour ago 0 comment Share 0FacebookTwitterPinterestRedditWhatsappEmail 1 You Might Be Interested In ‘The Seed of the Sacred Fig’ Review: An Absorbing and Well-Acted Slow-Burn Drama That Blends Internal Conflict of a Family Drama and Psychological Thriller ‘Speak No Evil’ Review: An Americanized Remake for Better and Worse Review: ‘Emilia Pérez’ is a Stylish Crime Drama Lost in Narrative Void ‘Blitz’ Review: Beautifully Crafted, Emotionally Hollow ‘Merry Christmas’ Review: A Night Shrouded in Tedious Mystery ‘Nobody 2’ Review: A Formulaic Sequel Saved by Bob Odenkirk’s No-Nonsense Performance and Timo Tjahjanto’s Visceral Action-Comedy Mayhem ‘Masters of the Universe’ Review: Travis Knight’s Big-Budget Redo Gets Overly Juvenile for its Own Good | Talking Films Previous Story ‘Backrooms’ Review: Liminal Space Has Never Been Scarier Source link You Might Be Interested In ‘Bridget Jones: Mad About the Boy’ Review: A Heartfelt and Hilarious End of an Era ‘Joker: Folie à Deux’ Review: An Ambitious Musical Failure ‘Predator: Killer of Killers’ Review: A Violent and Visually Stunning Animated Anthology Film Sundance 2025: DJ Ahmet is a Tale of Music, Love, and Rebellion in the Balkans ‘Disclaimer’ Review: An Understated Tale of Revenge and Perspective ‘Baksho Bondi (Shadowbox)’ Review: A Beacon of Hope in a Callous World Share 0 FacebookTwitterPinterestRedditWhatsappEmail DIGITAL TIMES You may also like ‘Backrooms’ Review: Liminal Space Has Never Been Scarier ‘In the Grey’ Review: Guy Ritchie’s Latest Movie... ‘Drishyam 3’ Review: Mohanlal’s Georgekutty Fights Inner Demons... ‘The Mandalorian and Grogu’ Review: Jon Favreau Embraces... ‘Bayaar’ Review: Three Souls, One Lodge, and the... ‘Mortal Kombat II’ Review: You Can’t Pack a...