Seatle PI writes: "You can say this for Brett Ratner: The guy doesn't slack off. Somewhere between developing a dozen odd TV and film projects (including Hugh Hefner's Playboy biopic and the long-gestating Beverly Hills Cop 4), publishing Old Hollywood books, starting his own director-focused music video anthology, and shepherding festival films like the Sundance doc Catfish and this week's Cannes market offering Skyline to distribution deals, the Rush Hour director found time to re-edit the Bollywood film Kites for American audiences -- less spontaneous song and dance, more car chases, tightly edited action sequences, and even tighter shots of sexy stars Barbara Mori and Hrithik Roshan -- resulting in this week's dubbed international version, Kites: The Remix."
Speak No Evil is a bone-chilling experience, one of the only films in recent memory that can make even the most ordinary poolside and family holiday moments feel ominous and haunting, you will not forget this one. It will stay with you way past watching the film. Speak No Evil is not for the faint of heart, especially if you have children, James McAvoy's performance is spectacular at making you feel uneasy and makes this a must-watch psychological thriller.
Megan Fox has the time of her life as a seductive murderbot in Subservience.
Kevin Smith's latest comedy The 4:30 Movie contains heart and a wonderful tribute to cinema.