No one actually expected Chopra to have a big role in the film, given that the entire movie was going to be about Neo and Trinity. Priyanka Chopra: The Matrix Resurrections Anil Kapoor got more screentime in his new Licious ad that he did in the film. Nobody knew what character he was playing but having Tom Cruise promote the film in India with Kapoor by his side indicated a meaty role. Anil Kapoor - Mission Impossible 4: Ghost Protocolįollowing the success of Slumdog Millionaire, actor Anil Kapoor was greatly advertised for his role in MI 4. So forgive me for feeling a little cheated when our performers are given roles shorter than ads between overs, and as insignificant as ads between overs. Director and co-writer Mike Flanagan has made a beautifully crafted horror film, filled with atmosphere and authentic period detail.Every time an Indian actor, primarily from Bollywood, makes it to the global stage by being part of a Hollywood film, we cheer for them, we firmly stand behind them and we buy tickets to watch those films. We also see the actual demon that takes over her body, and there are several terrifying deaths. The little girl says and does startling things and her wholesome appearance changes in disturbing ways as the evil builds within her. Soon, strange things start happening involving the younger daughter, Wilson’s Doris, who has connected with restless spirits who inhabited the family’s house decades earlier. One day, she brings home an exciting, new board game called Ouija to spice up her activities with her clients.
In this prequel to the 2014 horror movie Ouija, Elizabeth Reaser stars as a widowed fortuneteller living in 1967 Los Angeles and raising her two daughters (Annalise Basso and Lulu Wilson). This movie is super scary and a total blast, with some supremely creepy imagery that will freak you out no matter how old you are. If you’re a horror fan, you’ll love this – just don’t watch it with the kids unless they’re teenagers. Rating: PG-13, for disturbing images, terror and thematic elements. Suitable for viewers around 12 and older. There’s also language scattered throughout. There’s gunfire and physical violence, with several characters ending up dead. McAvoy’s versatile, technically precise performance is a lot of fun to watch, but the movie as a whole is extremely tense and disturbing, especially as a darker force begins to overtake his character. They try to manipulate him and escape based on whichever personality is in control at any particular moment. McAvoy’s character abducts three teenage girls (Anya Taylor-Joy, Jessica Sula, and Haley Lu Richardson) from the mall and drags them back to his underground lair. Night Shyamalan is a return to form and a rare, straight-up horror film from the writer-director. But the movie itself definitely isn’t for kids. James McAvoy stars as a kidnapper with multiple personalities, one of whom is a playful, 9-year-old boy. Rating: PG-13, for disturbing thematic content and behavior, violence and some language. I’d say it’s fine for kids around 10 or 11 and older. Everything about this movie, from the violence to the sex, is rather cartoonish, though. And there’s quite a bit of language throughout the film. Cage is also a ladies man besides being a globetrotting adventurer, so we see him cavorting with several scantily clad beauties, including the suggestion of an orgy in a London penthouse. But because this is a PG-13 movie, we don’t see any blood, with the exception of one killing. Expect a ton of gunfire, with untold number of bad guys getting shot dead. Caruso’s film is silly and over the top, but at least it’s self-aware.
It doesn’t really matter what the device does – it’s the McGuffin, an excuse to show Cage and his ragtag band of badass cohorts zooming around on skateboards and motorcycles and jumping out of planes and such. This time, his character, Xander Cage, must emerge from his self-imposed exile to find a contraption known as Pandora’s Box, which can make satellites fall from the sky with the push of a button. It’s been 15 years since Vin Diesel last starred in a xXx movie, and although he’s creeping toward AARP age, he’s back and more extreme than ever. Rating: PG-13, for extended sequences of gunplay and violent action, and for sexual material and language.