Lucky Hank will premiere on AMC on March 19, 2023.
Poster
Synopsis
From the executive producers of Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul, Bob Odenkirk is Lucky Hank. An English department chairman at an underfunded college, Professor Hank Devereaux toes the line between midlife crisis and full-blown meltdown, navigating the offbeat chaos in his personal and professional life – oddly proving tantrums get better with age.
Official Poster And Trailer For THE DONOR PARTY - Starring Malin Åkerman, Rob Corddry and Jerry O’Connell - In Theaters and VOD 3/3
Vertical has released these official poster and trailer for THE DONOR PARTY
In Theaters and On Demand March 3, 2023
DIRECTED AND WRITTEN BY: Thom Harp
PRODUCED BY: Nancy Leopardi & Ross Kohn, Malin Åkerman, Rob Corddry
STARRING: Malin Åkerman, Rob Corddry, Erinn Hayes, Bria Samoné Henderson, Meadow Williams, Dan Ahdoot, Jeff Torres, Patty Guggenheim, Cedric Yarbrough, Aarti Mann, Rizwan…
Kelly Perce, Cedric Yarbrough, Wendi McLendon-Covey and Jillian Boyd is another real estate agent, Mindy Watt, in Closing Escrow (2007). Jillian was born in Irving, Texas, and has 12 acting credits from a 1992 episode of In the Heat of the Night to a 2009 tv movie. Jill was also in an episode of The New Adventures of Old Christine.
RENO 911! Series Trailer (2020) Quibi Comedy HD
#Reno911 is BACK on Quibi, May 4. Download the app now to get 90 days free: link.quibi.com/yt
PLOT: An irreverent look at what goes on behind-the-scenes in Reno, Nevada’s Sheriff’s Department.
CAST: Cedric Yarbrough, Niecy Nash, Robert Ben Garant, Patton Oswalt
SUBSCRIBE for more Movie Trailers HERE: https://goo.gl/Yr3O86
Check out all of the JOBLO…
Featuring the voices of Jack Black, Awkwafina, Viola Davis, Dustin Hoffman, James Hong, Bryan Cranston, Ian McShane, Ke Huy Quan, Lori Tan Chinn, Ronny Chieng, Seth Rogen, James Murray, James Sie, Cedric Yarbrough, Vic Chao, Audrey Brooke, Lincoln Nakamura, Cece Valentina, April Hong , Suzanne Buirgy, Logan Kim, Reyn Doi, Mick Wingert and MrBeast.
Screenplay by Jonathan Aibel & Glenn Berger and Darren Lemke.
Directed by Mike Mitchell.
Distributed by Universal Pictures. 94 minutes. Rated PG.
When walking into another sequel from a long running movie franchise, I try to hold a certain expectation. Usually the expectation is that a new unforeseen villain just appears without much rhythm or reason. There have not been many times that I have seen this pulled off in a way that is cohesive to the overarching story. However, I was pleasantly surprised this week by the newest chapter in the Kung Fu Panda series. While I have a couple of notes of things I would like to have seen done differently, I found the concepts interesting.
The newest villain, The Chameleon (Viola Davis), was wonderful from a design standpoint, but unfortunately bland from a characteristic standpoint. I had hoped to see more of a story or motive behind her actions. In the film it was stated that she was rejected by mentors, and she grew bitter from that as a result.
What the villain lacked in a strong motive; she made up for in plan execution. Personally, I was excited to see the former villains of the past movies brought back for this story. As this movie served as the passing of the torch in our main character Po's (Jack Black) journey, it was fulfilling to see him display his growth for his past foes. I especially was glad to see the role of Tai Lung being reprised by Ian McShane.
With this being said, I wished that there was more interaction between Po and Tai Lung. The rivalry they had in the first movie was memorable enough for me to suddenly think about it, even after not having seen a movie from this franchise for a very long time. Considering that Tai Lung's exit from the movie was the moment that he gave Po his respect, I hoped that it would have been more sincere than it came across.
This goes for the entire final battle of the movie as well. The concept of bringing back the spirits of the past villains could have made an incredible battle sequence that tied up loose ends between our hero and his former foes. Since Po has truly embodied the importance of forgiveness and striving to do the right thing, it would have been a great moment of character growth for him to make up with the villains he once fought.
However, despite the faults in the story's execution, this was a nice watch. I thoroughly enjoyed the art style and performances given by the cast. Overall this was another high-quality movie from DreamWorks, and I look forward to the next chapter.