


#Only the brave movie 2017 amazon series
Guillermo del Toro's three Netflix series (and a movie) are peak children's entertainment, though the fact that they are nominally curated for the single-digit age crowd may preclude some del Toro completists from venturing into Arcadia. If you loved Mimic, you might also enjoy: Creep (2004), Christopher Smith's highly-superior subway freakout, streaming on Tubi and available on BFI Player Classics with a subscription. It's so anonymous you could feasibly believe it was directed by Joe Chappelle or Gregory Widen, not Guillermo del Toro.ĭel Toro's slightly-improved director's cut (available to rent on Amazon Prime Video and YouTube) is the only version worth watching, but it's still an imperfect film that feels far from the filmmaker's singular vision. (During the climax, the film inexplicably cuts to the New York street on California's Paramount lot, where a series of narratively unrelated explosions decimate Seinfeld's neighborhood.) Mimic feels depressingly similar to a dozen or so other Dimension releases from around this time, down to the Marco Beltrami score and its Scream-inspired poster.

Mim-Blecch!, as Mad magazine never called it, essentially boils down to "killer cockroaches take the subway." Starring Mira Sorvino, Mimic has the makings of a great creature feature, and indeed there are flashes that work, but it is visibly cobbled together by a committee, riddled with inconsistent performances and inserts that make no earthly sense. I know which one was worse…the kidnapping made more sense. I have to tell you, two horrible things happened in the late '90s: my father was kidnapped and I worked with the Weinsteins.

My first American experience was almost my last because it was with the Weinsteins and Miramax. Of his first American film, del Toro had this to say to a crowd at London's BFI Film Festival in 2017: "I really hated the experience. If you loved Don't Be Afraid of the Dark, you might also enjoy: Intruders (2011), streaming on Amazon Prime Video, Tubi, Peacock, Pluto TV, and Vudu.ĭirected, written, and produced by Guillermo del Toro Madison makes for a peculiar heroine her performance as a realistically stroppy adolescent, in possession of a weariness and cynicism far beyond her years, recalls Karen Kilgariff playing a child in an improv scene. It burns a great deal of its slim 99-minute running time as a proto- Conjuring flick, with characters wandering dark corridors while things LOUDLY bump in the night, until a climax arrives that promises both increased action and sound effects but little else.
#Only the brave movie 2017 amazon tv
Troy Nixey directs this passable remake of the stellar 1973 TV movie of the same name (available to rent on Google Play and YouTube, and well worth it), about a young girl (Bailee Madison) who travels to Rhode Island to live with her estranged father ( Guy Pearce, on his way to cash the check) and his new girlfriend ( Katie Holmes, nicely understated here) in the dank mansion they unknowingly share with light-averse gremlins.ĭon't Be Afraid of the Dark isn't so much a poor film as it is an incredibly standard one. Written and produced by Guillermo del Toro
