The Year's Worst Movies
Children of the Corn
"Children of the Corn" franchise continues with the 11th movie, featuring a 12-year-old girl as the cult leader and a high school student standing up to her murderous followers.
"Your Place or Mine" is a Netflix rom-com about two best friends who switch houses and fall in love through phone calls. Starring Reese Witherspoon and Aston Kutcher.
Life Upside Down
"Children of the Corn" franchise continues with the 11th movie, featuring a 12-year-old girl as the cult leader and a high school student standing up to her murderous followers.
"House Party" remake disappoints with celebrity branding and lack of heart, say critics. LeBron James produces and makes cameo, but fails to save the drug-fueled party hijinks.
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A Disappointing Sci-Fi Adventure with Adam Driver, Dinosaurs, and Space Rocks
"Paint" stars Owen Wilson as Carl Nargle, a public TV art instructor who faces an existential crisis when a younger painter threatens his comfortable life.
Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey
"Winnie-the-Pooh: Blood and Honey" is a horror take on A.A. Milne's classic stories set in the Hundred Acre Wood.
"Missing," the sequel to 2018's hit thriller "Searching," is being released five years after the original. While the first movie was highly profitable, there are doubts about the sequel's success due to the long gap between the two films.
Plane
Gerard Butler's disaster movies have been reliable at the box office, but his latest film "Greenland" only made $40 million worldwide, likely due to its release during the pandemic. This doesn't bode well for his new film "Plane."
Tom Hanks stars as a grumpy widower in "A Man Called Otto" who finds a new sense of purpose after a young family moves in next door.