Archive
WATERWORLD – James Newton Howard
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
For many years in Hollywood Waterworld – the title of Kevin Costner’s 1995 action-adventure movie – was a byword for financial disaster in moviemaking. Originally conceived by screenwriter Peter Rader in the mid-1980s as a low budget ‘Mad Max on water’ the script was eventually rewritten by David Twohy, whose version leaned heavily into the post-apocalyptic sci-fi genre. Costner, then at the height of his fame following hits like Dances with Wolves and The Bodyguard, signed on to produce and star, and he recruited Kevin Reynolds, who directed him in Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves, to helm the film. However, what started as a modestly budgeted film ballooned into a then-record-breaking $175 million production, eventually earning it the industry nicknames “Fishtar” and “Kevin’s Gate,” after notorious flops Ishtar and Heaven’s Gate. The production was plagued by logistical challenges, including destroyed sets, weather delays, crew injuries, and creative clashes between Costner and Reynolds, who eventually left the project entirely during post-production, leaving Costner to oversee the final edit. Read more…
THE FANTASTIC FOUR: FIRST STEPS – Michael Giacchino
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
WARNING: THIS REVIEW CONTAINS PLOT SPOILERS. IF YOU HAVE NOT YET SEEN THE FILM, YOU MIGHT WANT TO CONSIDER WAITING UNTIL AFTER YOU HAVE DONE SO TO READ IT.
Marvel have been trying to make the Fantastic Four happen for years. The characters, which first debuted in the comics in 1961, were reportedly favorites of the legendary Stan Lee, and are often referred to as “Marvel’s first family”. The group comprises Reed Richards, also known as Mr. Fantastic, a brilliant scientist who can stretch his body into incredible shapes and lengths; Sue Storm, the Invisible Woman, who can become invisible and generate powerful force fields; Johnny Storm, the Human Torch, who can engulf himself in flames and fly; and Ben Grimm, transformed into the rock-like Thing, whose immense strength contrasts with his gruff but lovable demeanor. The four gained their powers after exposure to cosmic rays during a space mission, and their adventures often blend science fiction with personal drama and epic battles against various supervillains. Read more…
THE MAN IN HALF MOON STREET – Miklós Rózsa
GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Original Review by Craig Lysy
Paramount Pictures decided that the stage play The Man in Half Moon Street by Barré Lyndon, which opened at London’s New Theatre on March 22, 1939, and ran for 172 performances, would translate well to the big screen. Film rights were purchased, Walter MacEwen was placed in charge of production, and Ralph Murphy was tasked with directing, with Garret Ford and Charles Kenyon writing the screenplay. For the cast, Nils Asther would star as Dr. Julian Karell, joined by Helen Walker as Eve Brandon, Reinhold Schünzel as Dr. Kurt van Bruecken, Paul Cavanaugh as Dr. Henry Latimer, Edmund Breon as Sir Humphrey Brandon, and Matthew Boulton as Detective Inspector Ned Garth. Read more…
BEYOND RANGOON – Hans Zimmer
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
Beyond Rangoon is a political drama/thriller directed by John Boorman, inspired by the real events of the 1988 Burmese Uprising, when students and civilians protested against the military regime of then-dictator Ne Win, leading to thousands of deaths. Patricia Arquette stars as Laura Bowman, an American doctor who travels to Burma (now Myanmar) in the late 1980s with her sister Andi (played by Frances McDormand) in an attempt to recover from the traumatic murder of her husband and son. Their vacation unexpectedly coincides with the uprising, and while attempting to leave the country Laura loses her passport, inadvertently becoming trapped in the increasingly volatile nation. As she navigates a dangerous and unfamiliar landscape, Laura becomes a reluctant witness to the government’s violent repression of student demonstrators; however, she is guided by a former university professor turned dissident U Aung Ko (playing a fictionalized version of himself) who helps her understand the political crisis engulfing the country, and to flee to safety. Read more…
I KNOW WHAT YOU DID LAST SUMMER – Chanda Dancy
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
A sort-of-sequel, sort-of-remake, this year’s I Know What You Did Last Summer is a slasher horror film directed by Jennifer Kaytin Robinson, and is the fifth instalment in the ‘IKWYDLS’ franchise following the original 1997 film, the first sequel from 1998, the straight-to-DVD third film from 2006, and the short-lived Amazon Prime TV series that aired in 2021. Like all the other entries, the story follows a group of wealthy and privileged teenagers who accidentally kill a man in a car accident, and cover up their involvement to avoid consequences. A year later, as they try to move on with their lives, a stalker sends them taunting messages about their crime, and they soon realize that the stalker is imitating the fisherman serial killer from the events depicted in the first film. The film stars Madeline Cline, Chase Sui Wonders, Jonathan Hauer-King, Tyriq Withers, and Sarah Pidgeon, with Jennifer Love Hewitt and Freddie Prinze Jr. reprising their roles as the survivors of the original massacre. Read more…
DRAGON SEED – Herbert Stothart
GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Original Review by Craig Lysy
MGM achieved stunning commercial and critical success adapting novelist Pearl S. Buck’s “The Good Earth” 1937 to the big screen. As such they decided to purchase the film rights to Buck’s subsequent novel “Dragon Seed,”, which was also set in 1930’s China. Pandro Berman was placed in charge of production with a $3 million budget, Jack Conway and Harold S. Bucquet would share directing duties, and Marguerite Roberts and Jane Murlin would write the screenplay. For the cast, Katherine Hepburn would star as Jade, joined by Walter Huston as Ling Tan, Aline MacMahon as Ling Tan’s wife, Akim Tamiroff as Wu Lien, Turhan Bey as Lao Er Tan, and Lionel Barrymore providing narration. Read more…
OPERATION DUMBO DROP – David Newman
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
Loosely based on a real event that happened during the Vietnam War in 1968, Operation Dumbo Drop is a family-friendly action-comedy-drama written by Jim Kouf and Gene Quintano, and directed by Simon Wincer, who previously helmed titles such as Free Willy and Quigley Down Under. The film is set in a U.S. Army base located close to a small Vietnamese village that is sympathetic to the American cause. When enemy forces discover the village’s alliance with U.S. troops, they retaliate by killing the villagers’ elephant, which is not only vital to their livelihood but also holds significant cultural and ceremonial importance. Wanting to maintain the villagers’ trust and rebuild the alliance, the base’s captain, Sam Cahill, is ordered to procure a new elephant, and so he puts together a reluctant crew to help him locate a brand new pachyderm, transport it through enemy territory, and deliver it to its new home. The film starred Danny Glover, Ray Liotta, and Denis Leary, and had an original score by David Newman. Read more…
KEY LARGO – Max Steiner
GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Original Review by Craig Lysy
Warner Brothers had produced four very successful films that paired marquee actors Edward G. Robinson and Humphrey Bogart; Bullets or Ballots (1936), Kid Galahad (1937), The Amazing Dr. Clitterhouse (1938) and Brother Orchid (1940). They decided on yet another collaboration after purchasing the film rights for the 1939 play “Key Largo” by Maxwell Anderson. Jerry Wald was placed in charge of production with a $1.8 million budget, John Huston would direct, and Huston and Richard Brooks would write the screenplay. The cast was stellar with Humphrey Bogart as Major Frank “Soldier” McCloud, Edward G. Robinson as Johnny Rocco, Lauren Bacall as Nora Temple, Lionel Barrymore as James Temple, and Claire Trevor as Gaye Dawn. Read more…
LORD OF ILLUSIONS – Simon Boswell
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
Lord of Illusions is an excellent, underrated film written and directed by horror legend Clive Barker, based on his own short story The Last Illusion. The story blends elements detective noir, supernatural horror, and dark fantasy, and was his third directorial effort following Hellraiser in 1987 and Nightbreed in 1990. Scott Bakula stars as Harry D’Amour, a hardboiled private investigator based in New York who specializes in cases involving the occult. After traveling to Los Angeles on a routine insurance case, D’Amour stumbles into a far more sinister world involving the remnants of a doomsday cult once led by the charismatic and sadistic sorcerer named Nix (Daniel von Bargen). Thirteen years earlier, Nix had attempted to unleash dark powers upon the world but was stopped by his former disciple Philip Swann (Kevin J. O’Connor) and a group of fellow magicians. Swann has since become a world-famous illusionist, having buried the truth of his real supernatural powers beneath a layer of stage trickery. As D’Amour investigates further, he becomes entangled in a deadly conspiracy when Swann is killed during a stage performance gone wrong, and Swann’s widow Dorothea (Famke Janssen) enlists D’Amour’s help to uncover the truth behind her husband’s death. Read more…
JURASSIC WORLD: REBIRTH – Alexandre Desplat
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
It’s amazing to think that it has now been more than 30 years since the first Jurassic Park movie, and that we are now on our seventh film in the franchise that originated from Michael Crichton’s classic sci-fi adventure novel. The latest film, Jurassic World: Rebirth, takes place five years after the events of the last film, Jurassic World: Dominion, and is set in a near-future time where the descendants of the original cloned dinosaurs continue to co-exist with humans. However, due to a warming planet, the dinosaurs have been forced to reside in areas around the equator, and are beginning to dwindle in number. The plot involves a pharmaceutical company who sends a team into one of these equatorial areas to obtain bio-samples from three different dinosaur specimens, which may hold the key to creating a groundbreaking new heart disease treatment. Of course, things go wrong as they always do, when the team encounters a previously unknown and incredibly violent dinosaur clone mutation. The film stars Scarlett Johansson, Jonathan Bailey, Mahershala Ali, and Rupert Friend, is written by David Koepp (who wrote the original Jurassic Park and its first sequel The Lost World), and is directed by Gareth Edwards. Read more…
MILDRED PIERCE – Max Steiner
GREATEST SCORES OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY
Original Review by Craig Lysy
After eighteen years as a marquee actress for MGM, Joan Crawford departed the studio in search of better roles, signing a three-year contract with Warner Brothers. The studio had purchased the film rights to the popular novel “Mildred Pierce” by James M. Cain and Crawford campaigned hard for the role. Director Michael Curtiz did not believe she was right for the role, but relented when she acquiesced to the indignity of a screen test, which changed his mind. Jerry Wald was placed in charge of production with a $1.4 million budget, Curtiz would direct, and Ranald MacDougall was hired to write the screenplay. Joining Crawford would be Jack Carson as Wally Fray, Zachary Scott as Monte Beragon, Eve Arden as Ida Corwin, Ann Blyth as Veda Pierce Forrester, and Bruce Bennett as Bert Pierce. Read more…
Mark Snow, 1946-2025
Composer Mark Snow died on July 4, 2025, at his home in Connecticut after a short illness. He was 78.
Martin Fulterman was born in August 1946, in Brooklyn, New York. He studied piano as a child, and he later attended New York’s High School of Music and Art and the Juilliard School of Music, where his roommate was fellow composer Michael Kamen. They co-founded the New York Rock & Roll Ensemble, and released several well-regarded albums.
Fulterman adopted the professional pseudonym ‘Mark Snow’ after he moved to Los Angeles in the mid-1970s. He began his film and TV career writing music for the ABC drama series The Rookies starring his then-brother-in-law, actor Georg Stanford Brown, and quickly established himself as one of the most in-demand composers working on American television, writing for massively popular shows such as Starsky & Hutch, The Love Boat, Hart to Hart, Dynasty, Cagney & Lacey, and T. J. Hooker.
However, it was his association with the 1993 sci-fi series The X-Files starring David Duchovny and Gillian Anderson that brought Snow to international fame. In addition to writing its iconic whistled main theme, Snow scored more than 200 episodes of the show across 11 seasons, as well as scoring its two spin-off theatrical movies in 1998 and 2008. The single of the instrumental main title theme was an unexpected chart hit in the United Kingdom and elsewhere, and he received five Emmy nominations for Outstanding Music Composition for a Series between 1997 and 2002 for different X-Files episodes.
Snow also received Emmy nominations for scoring the TV series Ghost Whisperer (2005-2010), writing the theme for Nowhere Man (1996), and for scoring the TV movies Something About Amelia (1984), An American Story (1993), Oldest Living Confederate Widow Tells All (1994), Children of the Dust (1995), and Helter Skelter (2004). Read more…
SPECIES – Christopher Young
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
Species is a science fiction horror film that blends alien-invasion tropes with creature-feature thrills. Directed by Roger Donaldson from a screenplay by Dennis Feldman, the story begins with a top-secret government project called SETI (Search for Extraterrestrial Intelligence), which receives a transmission from outer space containing DNA instructions for creating a hybrid organism – part human, part alien. Scientists follow the instructions and create a girl named Sil, who appears human but matures at an astonishing rate and soon exhibits alarming, inhuman traits. When the SETI lead scientist Xavier Fitch (Ben Kingsley) deems her too dangerous, they attempt to terminate her, but she escapes from the lab; now fully grown and played by Natasha Henstridge, Sil goes on the run in Los Angeles, driven by a primal urge to reproduce. Her alien DNA pushes her to find a mate, but any man she deems genetically unfit meets a gruesome end. A team is assembled to track her down, including an empath (Forest Whitaker), a molecular biologist (Alfred Molina), an anthropologist (Marg Helgenberger), and a government assassin (Michael Madsen), and as Sil leaves a trail of bodies behind her, the team races against time to prevent her from mating and giving birth to a potentially unstoppable alien species. Read more…
F1: THE MOVIE – Hans Zimmer
Original Review by Jonathan Broxton
It’s lights out and away we go!
Anyone who knows me in real life knows that I have been a massive fan of Formula 1 motor racing for many, many years. My grandfather, who was also a big fan, introduced me to it in the late 1980s – the first race I actively remember watching was the 1987 British Grand Prix, when I was 11, which was won by Nigel Mansell in extraordinarily emotional circumstances – and since then I have watched virtually every race of every subsequent season, cheering on a succession of great British drivers, from Mansell to Martin Brundle, Damon Hill and Johnny Herbert, Jenson Button, and now Lando Norris and George Russell. I love everything about the sport; the incredible skill and strength of the drivers, the chess-like tactics and strategies of the teams, the world-class engineering. You become invested in the lives of everyone involved, their triumphs and tragedies, and you watch it unfold across the world every two weeks at speeds approaching 200mph. There’s nothing like it. Read more…







