Roofman

2025   Paramount Pictures

Rated:  R

Length:  2 hr  6min

Comedy ~ Crime ~ Drama ~ Romance ~ True Story

Directed by:  Derek Cianfrance

Starring:  Channing Tatum, Kirsten DunstLaKeith StanfieldJuno Temple, Peter Dinklage,  Ben MendelsohnMelonie DiazUzo AdubaLily Collias, and Jimmy O. Yang.

Based On Actual Events And Terrible Decisions

We all make choices and decisions everyday, whether we want to or not. We try to make the right decisions but sometimes they just don’t turn out that way. If you have a family and kids you make decisions based on trying to give them the best life you can. Including giving them everything that they want that makes them happy. Jeffrey Manchester (Channing Tatum) made some bad choices and decisions about how to get his family the things they wanted but he couldn’t afford. He figured out how to break through the roof of a McDonald’s, hiding out in the bathroom until the morning crew and manager arrived, then escorting the group politely into the freezer walk-in and robbing the store of all it’s cash.

He became very successful at robbing McDonald’s ultimately robbing an estimated 45-60 stores and making his family happy in the process, buying them everything that they wanted.  He was dubbed “The Roofman” by the police and evaded capture until he got greedy and attempted to rob two stores in the same area on the same day. He was sentenced to prison losing everything including his family, but cleverly escaped, ending up hiding out in a nearby Toys-R-Us in Charlotte, North Carolina. Leigh Moore (Kirsten Dunst), a divorcee with two daughters, works at the store and catches Jeffrey’s attention. Jeffrey bravely stalks her to the Church where she attends under the guise of donating to their annual Christmas toy drive, donating a bagful of toys stolen from the Toys-R-Us store.

They start to date and Jeffrey tries hard to conceal his real identity, going by the alias John Zorn. As their relationship grows stronger, Jeffrey tries to be the family man he couldn’t be with his real family. Making sure Leigh and her daughters have everything they want and need, trying to connect emotionally with them. Leigh isn’t just a love interest; she’s the mirror that reflects the man Jeffrey wants to be versus the one he’s become. Their growing relationship gives the film its heart, grounding the chase in something far more personal, redemption. Tatum and Dunst have a chemistry that feels honest and unforced, pulling you into moments that almost make you forget the man’s a wanted fugitive. There is a final scene between the two of them that is absolutely heartbreaking, capturing the real emotion between Jeffrey and Leigh.

Director Derek Cianfrance brilliantly contrasts Jeffrey’s calm domestic moments with the encroaching reality of his past catching up. Each scene in the bright, colorful toy aisles feels like a countdown, playful on the surface, tense underneath. You know it can’t last, but you still want it to. Jeffrey learns that freedom comes with a price, and the film dives deep into the psychological unraveling that follows. It’s fascinating watching a man so careful, so cunning, begin to lose control of the very plan that once defined him. You are instantly drawn into the psyche of Jeffrey Manchester, rooting for him even though you know he is a criminal. And that is thanks to Channing Tatum’s brilliant performance as Jeffrey, might be one of his best yet.

LaKeith Stanfield plays Steve, the loyal, resourceful, and compassionate best friend to Jeff Manchester, helping him with fake documents and support while risking his own freedom. Peter Dinklage plays Mitch, the observant and perhaps quirky store manager at the Toys-R-Us where Jeffrey hides out, developing a unique dynamic with Tatum’s character and Kirsten Dunst’s employee, offering a blend of comedy and drama in a role that highlights his versatility as an actor.

Roofman isn’t just a great true-crime story,  it’s a moral puzzle wrapped in an unexpectedly emotional thriller. It reminds us that even when our intentions are good, our choices can define us in ways we never see coming.

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Dog

Fly Me To The Moon

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery

2025   Netflix

Rated:  PG-13

Length:  2 hr  24min

Comedy ~ Crime ~ Drama ~ Mystery ~ Thriller ~ Whodunnit

Directed by:  Rian Johnson

Starring: Daniel Craig, Josh O’ConnorGlenn CloseJosh BrolinMila KunisJeremy RennerKerry WashingtonAndrew ScottCailee SpaenyDaryl McCormack, and Thomas Haden Church.

Benoit Blanc Is Back!

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery pulls Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) into his darkest case yet, summoned to a tight-knit rural community gripped by scandal after the shocking death of the fiery, domineering leader of the local Church Priest Monsignor Jefferson Wicks (Josh Brolin).

The prime suspects are:

They all weave a tense net of alibis, grudges, and histories amid Sunday services and midnight reckonings that expose abuses and shattered vows. What starts as a tidy whodunit spirals through labyrinthine twists, feints within feints, alibis that devour each other, revelations that flip loyalties upside down, and a mid-film bombshell that redefines every suspect’s soul, culminating in a finale as merciless and mind-melting as Blanc’s previous cases, all without a single predictable step. The mystery tightens around these players, pushing Blanc into moral gray zones the prior films merely grazed.​

Where Knives Out skewered privilege and Glass Onion mocked tech excess, Wake Up Dead Man excavates power, belief, and institutional weapons. It plays like a gothic church whodunnit, playful and twisty, but heavier emotionally with brutal fallout when truths erupt. Classic puzzle joys (alibis, herrings, reveals) persist, yet it probes who earns forgiveness or escapes when the “godly” circle wagons.​

Craig continues to have a blast as Benoit Blanc, but this time the charm and drawl hide a man genuinely shaken by what he uncovers. The case forces Blanc to confront not just who committed the crime, but what kind of world keeps letting the same patterns repeat, giving him some of his most haunted and introspective moments in the Knives Out trilogy. Yet even in the darkest scenes, Craig threads in just enough wry humor and observational wit to keep Blanc feeling like the same eccentric detective fans love, now pushed to his limits instead of simply amused by human folly.​

True to the series, the ensemble is loaded with memorable suspects and side players, each with sharp, specific motives and grudges that gradually peel back as the investigation deepens. Performances bounce between fervent righteousness, brittle denial, and raw vulnerability, underscoring how faith, shame, and community pressure can twist people in different directions. The dynamic between the younger characters and the older “pillars” of the town is especially juicy, framing the mystery as a generational clash over who gets to define truth and morality. Josh O’Connor’s brooding Jud steals scenes as faith’s black sheep; Glenn Close’s Martha and Josh Brolin’s Wicks embody belief’s sharp edges.​

Wake Up Dead Man: A Knives Out Mystery is highly recommended for anyone who loved the first two films and is ready for a darker, more emotionally loaded spin on Blanc’s world. It keeps the clever structure, rug-pull twists, and character-driven revelations that made the other two movies a hit, while pushing deeper into messy questions about belief, justice, and who gets to walk away clean when the dust settles. You know what Bobby says:

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Knives Out

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery

2022   Netflix

Rated:  PG-13

Length:  2 hr  19min

Comedy ~ Crime ~ Drama ~ Mystery ~ Thriller ~ Whodunnit

Directed by:  Rian Johnson

Starring:  Daniel Craig, Edward Norton, Janelle MonáeKathryn HahnLeslie Odom Jr.Jessica HenwickMadelyn ClineKate Hudson, and Dave Bautista.

Bad people. Beautiful places. Brilliant detective.

Glass Onion: A Knives Out Mystery transports the action to a luxurious private island owned by tech billionaire Miles Bron (Edward Norton), where a group of his handpicked “disruptors” gathers for a murder-mystery game that turns deadly real. Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) is back, invited under mysterious circumstances, poking at the egos and secrets of this elite crew amid opulent parties and elaborate puzzles. As Blanc unravels the threads, it becomes clear that Bron’s inner circle, each with axes to grind and alibis to fake, is hiding more than just bad ideas behind their success stories.

At the story’s core is Birdie Jay (Kate Hudson), Bron’s ditzy fashionista girlfriend with a heart of fool’s gold, alongside the sharp-tongued scientist Cassandra Brand (Janelle Monáe), loyal assistant Peggy (Jessica Henwick), and others like the YouTuber Duke (Dave Bautista) and his suspicious girlfriend Whiskey (Madelyn Cline). These characters orbit Bron like planets around a black hole of charisma, their loyalty tested when a key death upends the weekend getaway. Blanc’s quiet observations cut through the flash, turning the group’s self-congratulatory vibes into a powder keg of resentment and deception.

As the investigation heats up, Blanc navigates booby-trapped sets, hidden motives, and a script-flipping pace that keeps everyone guessing, all while the island’s isolation amps the stakes. Bron’s right-hand man Lionel (Leslie Odom Jr.) and the enigmatic Helen step into pivotal roles, forcing everyone to confront how far they’d go to protect their slice of the empire. The mystery builds through wild reveals and chases, with Blanc piecing together a puzzle that’s as much about ego as evidence.

Daniel Craig doubles down on Blanc’s charm, blending that drawling Southern wit with sharper impatience for nonsense this time around, gone is some of the goofiness, replaced by a steely focus that makes him feel even more like the genre’s new king. His physical ticks, like the fidgety hands and piercing stares, evolve into a more commanding presence, shedding any lingering Bond shadow while owning the detective’s theatrical flair amid absurdly rich suspects.

Janelle Monáe commands as Cassandra/Helen, channeling raw grief and intellect into a role that flips from overlooked genius to force of nature, her every glance loaded with unspoken fury. She nails the duality, vulnerable yet unbreakable, making her the emotional anchor in a sea of caricatures, with chemistry opposite Blanc that sparks like flint on steel.

Glass Onion amps the satire, swapping family dysfunction for tech-bro hubris and influencer excess, using the whodunnit to skewer “move fast and break things” culture, fake innovation, and loyalty bought with NDAs. Rian Johnson twists the formula harder, early reveals shift suspicion to deeper lies, blending Clue’s playfulness with Ocean’s Eleven polish for a mystery that’s gleefully meta yet brutally on-point about power and privilege today.​

Glass Onion is highly recommended for fans of clever twists, ensemble chaos, and Blanc’s brainpower, sharper and splashier than the original with 92% on Rotten Tomatoes!

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Knives Out

2019   Lionsgate Films

Rated:  PG-13

Length:  2 hr  10min

Comedy ~ Crime ~ Drama ~ Mystery ~ Thriller ~ Whodunnit

Directed by:  Rian Johnson

Starring:  Daniel Craig, Chris Evans, Ana de Armas, Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael Shannon, Don Johnson, Toni Collette, LaKeith Stanfield, Katherine Langford, Jaeden Martell, Christopher Plummer, Frank Oz, Riki Lindhome, Edi Patterson, K Callan, Noah Segan, M. Emmet Walsh, Marlene Forte and Joseph Gordon-Levitt.

Nothing Brings A Family Together Like Murder

Knives Out follows the wealthy Thrombey family in the aftermath of crime novelist Harlan Thrombey’s (Christopher Plummer) mysterious death at his sprawling estate. Detectives led by gentleman-sleuth Benoit Blanc (Daniel Craig) arrive to question the relatives, all of whom seem more interested in Harlan’s money than in mourning him. As Blanc listens in, it becomes clear that each family member is hiding something, and that the “suicide” might not be as straightforward as it looks.​

At the heart of the story is Marta Cabrera (Ana de Armas), Harlan’s kind, soft-spoken nurse, who had a close, genuine bond with him that his own children (Jamie Lee Curtis, Michael Shannon, Don Johnson, Toni Collette) seem to lack. Marta throws up when she tries to lie, which turns her into both an unlikely ally and a walking truth-detector for Blanc. When the will is read and Marta unexpectedly becomes the main heir to Harlan’s fortune and mansion, the once-smug Thrombeys quickly turn on her, exposing their entitlement and desperation in very down-to-earth, almost darkly comic ways.​

As pressure mounts, Marta finds herself scrambling to keep her own involvement with Harlan’s final hours hidden while also trying to do the right thing. Harlan’s black-sheep grandson Ransom (Chris Evans) steps in, acting like the only family member willing to help her, but his smug charm and sudden interest raise questions about his true motives. The investigation spirals into car chases, secret notes, and late-night meetings, all while Blanc patiently pieces together a timeline that keeps shifting as new details emerge.

Ana de Armas shines as Marta Cabrera, the immigrant nurse who’s equal parts heart and hidden steel in a house full of schemers. She plays her as genuinely kind and awkward, constantly fidgeting or throwing up when she tries to lie, which makes her the moral center everyone else orbits around. It’s a breakout role that lets her mix vulnerability with quiet smarts, turning what could be a side character into the emotional engine of the whole mystery. Her chemistry with Harlan (Christopher Plummer) feels real and earned, like the one authentic relationship in a family built on fakeness, which sets her up perfectly for the chaos when the will drops its bombshell. De Armas nails the outsider vibe too, soft-spoken accent, wide-eyed politeness that masks a fierce sense of right and wrong, making every scene she’s in crackle with tension and sympathy

A couple of minutes in watching Daniel Craig as Benoit Blanc, I forgot that it was Daniel Craig. Instead of just playing Daniel Craig with an accent, he disappears into Benoit Blanc completely. He leans hard into Benoit’s slow, drawling Southern charm, with a slightly goofy, theatrical edge, and it strips away all the cool, steely James Bond baggage we’re used to seeing almost immediately. The physicality helps too, looser posture, more expressive hands and face, and a kind of amused curiosity, so he feels like a quirky gentleman detective rather than an action star slumming it. The softness in his voice, the patience in his pacing, and the way he lets other characters fill the space all help you forget the actor and just track Blanc’s brain at work. It feels like watching a character from a classic mystery novel who has somehow wandered into a very modern, messy family drama, and Craig commits to that blend so completely that the star persona fades into the background.

Knives Out doesn’t just copy the old-school whodunnit formula, it updates it by blending classic mystery motifs with today’s social and political tensions. Rian Johnson builds the story around familiar elements, a big eccentric family, a sprawling mansion, and a quirky detective, but uses them to explore themes like privilege, immigration, and class conflict in a way that feels current rather than nostalgic. By flipping when and how key information is revealed, the film shifts the focus from simply guessing the killer to questioning motives, power dynamics, and who gets to claim the moral high ground, turning a cozy genre staple into something sharper and more reflective of the world viewers recognize now.

Knives Out is highly recommended for anyone who loves clever mysteries with bite. It nails the whodunit formula while delivering fresh laughs, stellar acting, and social commentary that doesn’t preach. You know what Bobby says:

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Merv

2025   Amazon MGM Studios

Rated:  PG

Length:  1 hr  45min

Christmas ~ Comedy ~ Romance

Directed by:  Jessica Swale

Starring: Charlie CoxZooey Deschanel, Chris Redd, Patricia Heaton, David Hunt and Gus The Real Life Rescue Dog turned Actor as Merv!

A Different Breed Of Romantic Comedy!

Merv, I mean Gus’s, story:

Merv is played by Gus, a real life rescue dog. Discovered as a stray in dire straits, possibly hit by a car, shot at, and even strangled with a shoelace, Gus was just around 10 months old when Houston-area rescuers from groups like Houston K-911 found him in horrific condition in 2018 or so. Severely emaciated, disfigured, and battling multiple injuries including bullet fragments, he faced a long road of medical treatments for infections, trauma, and emotional scars, but his resilient spirit shone through.​

With global support funding his recovery, Gus transformed into a healthy, joyful dog, eventually landing a forever home and becoming an ambassador for strays—earning accolades like American Hero Dog from the American Humane Society. Trained via agencies like Urban Paws, his natural charm and soulful expressiveness made him perfect for Merv, where director Jessica Swale highlighted his authentic reactions over scripted tricks.

Merv’s Take On The Movie:

Merv has a problem: his owners have split up and are trying to co-parent from different households, shuffling him back and forth like a furry football every week. It has left him thoroughly depressed, curled up in the corner of his Boston apartment with those soulful puppy eyes, ignoring his squeaky toys amid piles of pizza boxes and scattered laundry, while his dad (Charlie Cox) paces awkwardly and his mom (Zooey Deschanel) forces a smile during tense handoffs.​

But when Merv’s moping reaches epic lows, refusing walks and staring mournfully out rainy windows, his humans hatch a plan: a road trip to a sunny Florida dog resort packed with beach yoga, splashy pool parties, and wild golf cart escapades that finally loosen them up. Snowy slush melts into palm-fringed paradise, where Merv’s tail starts thumping as sunset strolls and clumsy ex-dates reignite the chemistry his nose always knew was still there—plus, endless treats and belly rubs don’t hurt, echoing Gus’s own triumphant recovery from trauma to tail-wags that landed him this star turn.​

Merv says, “From my floppy-eared vantage point the chaos is pure gold: Chris Redd’s over-the-top antics chasing me around, Patricia Heaton‘s sassy but loving vibes dishing advice, and my own breakout moments with zoomies across the sand and heartfelt stares that tug every heartstring, Gus’s natural expressiveness, honed from his hero-dog ambassadorship, steals every scene without a single trick. Director Jessica Swale captures the pet-parent pandemonium perfectly in this breezy rom-com, layering holiday cheer with themes of unconditional love and fresh starts, all without dipping into sappy territory, backed by upbeat montages and bark-along tunes.”

And you know what Bobby says:

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on Prime!


On set of MERV
Photo Credit: Dana Hawley/Prime
© Amazon Content Services LLC
MERV
Photo Credit: Prime
© Amazon Content Services LLC
Russ (Charlie Cox) in MERV
Photo Credit: Wilson Webb/Prime
© Amazon Content Services LLC
Anna (Zooey Deschanel) in MERV
Photo Credit: Wilson Webb/Prime
© Amazon Content Services LLC
Anna (Zooey Deschanel) and Russ (Charlie Cox) in MERV
Photo Credit: Wilson Webb/Prime
© Amazon Content Services LLC
Anna (Zooey Deschanel) and Russ (Charlie Cox) in MERV
Photo Credit: Prime
© Amazon Content Services LLC