Toxic Heroes, Stolen Secrets, and Murder Mysteries | See It or Skip It
Darren Aronofsky
Austin Butler, Matt Smith, Zoë Kravitz, Regina Hall
Crime Thriller
Darren Aronofsky takes on a journey of misfortune and mayhem as Hank Thompson (Austin Butler) is thrust into a world of Rabbi Gangsters, Fake Poop, and ’90s grunge with ” Caught Stealing”. I love the style and look of the film. I love the world that’s both dirty and uncomfortable, but also familiar and tight-knit. Austin Butler is hands down a movie star, and I cannot wait to see him and his contemporaries in the same age group take on the mantles held by the greats before them.
Zoë Kravitz and Matt Smith are great in their roles; Smith particularly stood out, likely due to finally having some substance to work with in film (aside from Morbius, of course). It moves at a breakneck pace, and while the story can tonally feel out of place in the second act, this is still an enjoyable ride that should be seen in theaters.
Jay Roach
Benedict Cumberbatch, Olivia Colman, Andy Samberg, Allison Janney, Kate McKinnon
Comedy, Drama
The Roses began as a family desperately in love, with two kids and dreams of a happily ever after. But when life throws a curveball at Theo and Ivy Rose (Benedict Cumberbatch and Olivia Coleman), and power dynamics shift, their relationship takes a slow turn into something they both couldn’t have anticipated. While the description of “The Roses” comes across as a straight drama, it is anything but.
This is one of the best comedies of the year, with dynamic and crackling chemistry from both Cumberbatch and Coleman. You will be laughing from the first to the last frame of this, and it is the perfect date night film. Go opening weekend with a family member open to swearing, and you will have an absolute blast.
Macon Blair
Peter Dinklage, Jacob Tremblay, Taylour Paige, Kevin Bacon, Elijah Wood, Julia Davis
Action, Body Horror, Comedy
Winston Gooze (Peter Dinklage) is a down-on-his-luck janitor who just got dealt a massive blow in the form of an incurable brain disease and a gigantic hospital bill. Wanting to save himself for his step-son, who recently lost his mother to cancer, Winston makes a plea to the one man who can save him. But when catastrophe hits, it deforms Winston and transforms him into an ungodly strong and green monster, who’s set on revenge for the ones who did this to him.
“The Toxic Avenger” is unabashedly full of gruesome joy. Beware if you’re squeamish, but if you want to feel good about supporting an independent voice, and even help in the film’s cause, partnering with Undue Medical Debt to erase at least $5 million in medical debt, well then, this is a no-brainer.
James Gunn
John Cena, Danielle Brooks, Freddie Stroma, Jennifer Holland, Steve Agee, Frank Grillo, Robert Patrick
Action, Comedy, Superhero
John Cena returns as the foul-mouthed, “peace at all costs” antihero. Set now firmly in James Gunn’s new DCU, Peacemaker now faces the ghost of his past in the form of Rick Flag Sr. (Frank Grillo), set on avenging the death of his son at the hands of Peacemaker in “The Suicide Squad”. While evading his current life or misfortunes and missed connections, Chris (Peacemaker) finds another universe that may end up being better than anything he could imagine.
To have this be so connected, or in some cases retrofitted into James Gunn’s DCU with the stark contrast in maturity rating, is admirable, if it wasn’t so in on the joke. John Cena continues to prove his acting chops, and with the first two episodes out currently, we are in for a more emotional Peacemaker that will continue to test Cena in ways that I assume will only improve his already impressive performance. With it only being two episodes, it’s hard to recommend because we are just barely scratching the show’s premise, but we will continue to check back in and tell you when the time is right to start binging.
Chris Columbus
Helen Mirren, Pierce Brosnan, Ben Kingsley, Celia Imrie, David Tennant, Naomi Ackie, Jonathan Pryce
Crime, Mystery
Described as a “Cozy Murder Mystery” and with an impressively stacked cast of A-list actors, “The Thursday Murder Club” is a story of the most polite HOA you’ve ever seen. This group of irresponsible but well-meaning sleuths has uncovered a real murder and works to solve it while their home is under threat of being torn down.
While not really something I would enjoy watching in my spare time, I do think this falls squarely in that Netflix-specific category of being something you can put on while doing chores, or on a Sunday with the family. Of course, the performances are great, and Chris Columbus delivers on the film’s premise, if not with a few too many twists.
Did you see any of the shows reviewed this weekend? Leave a comment if so, and make sure to follow us on all our social media platforms and listen to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, and more.
Note: See It or Skip It is proudly owned and produced by Patrick Beatty. ABC4 is a broadcast partner, but the show, its content, and opinions are independently created.
Tactile CSS is a pure CSS neumorphic UI kit that applies raised, sculpted, and clay-style…
WebHaptics is a haptic feedback library that targets mobile browsers across React, Vue, Svelte, and…
As geopolitical tensions escalate between Iran, Israel, and the United States, the cyber domain has…
In recent months, security researchers have observed a troubling trend: ransomware operators are exploiting a…
A critical vulnerability in the widely used Java authentication library pac4j-jwt exposes applications to total…
Google has rolled out an urgent security patch for Chrome on March 3, 2026, targeting…
This website uses cookies.