“The Intruders” boils down to another log for the pile of formulaic thrillers better suited as midweek made-for-cable filler.
DIGGING UP THE MARROW (2014)
Eclectic and occasionally eccentric, the overall vibe is more of a drunk stumble between serious and comical without threading a needle through a sweet spot that would effectively blend both moods.
WYRMWOOD: ROAD OF THE DEAD (2014)
“Wyrmwood” strips out the social commentary of Romero’s oeuvre and the dark despair of “The Walking Dead” in favor of flair, flash, and cinematic style.
THE MIRROR (2014)
It’s a catch-22 approach shooting the entire affair in its foot, heart, and head with a script and a style too simple to provide any more edge than that of plastic tableware.
THE OUIJA RESURRECTION: OUIJA EXPERIMENT 2 (2015)
The film’s crowning achievement is releasing just two weeks into January and already becoming the candidate to beat as worst movie of the year.
ALIEN OUTPOST (2014)
“Alien Outpost” ticks plenty of boxes for bullet-pumping action with a satisfying shot of sci-fi tracer fire laser-lighting the screen.
DARK HEARTS: THE SECRET OF HAUNTING MELISSA (2014)
The film remains ball-and-chained to a delivery format that hamstrings the rhythm and to fiction impenetrable for anyone who hasn’t already invested three hours into “Haunting Melissa."
WOLFCOP (2014)
Good-natured, good-humored, and well-intentioned, “Wolfcop” still spins its wheels by pumping blood leisurely when it rightfully screams to gush straight out of the vein.
HAUNTING MELISSA (2013)
You wouldn’t tolerate “Haunting Melissa” as a three-hour movie in a traditional format. Why tolerate it as a buggy app requiring countless mobile device restarts and popup prompt dismissals?
SANATORIUM (2013)
Should anyone need affirmation as to why “found footage” has an unfavorable reputation, “Sanatorium” can punch that ticket with commanding force.
FINAL PRAYER (THE BORDERLANDS) (2013)
“Final Prayer” surpasses the bulk of its “found footage” brethren with enough murky moodiness and devilish darkness to make itself memorable.
DRACULA UNTOLD (2014)
“Dracula Untold” casts the count as a swordfighting head of state hero in a chatty movie burdened by “Game of Thrones” political machinations and “Lord of the Rings” steel clanging.
GUARDIANS OF THE GALAXY (2014)
Who needs a mutant or an Avenger when a CGI raccoon and a semi-sentient tree can infuse this much personality into a movie already bursting at the seams with it?
DARK HAUL (2014)
Seeing Tom Sizemore play a standard tough guy gunman in a straightforward creature feature is akin to watching Kareem Abdul-Jabbar play charity basketball on the island of Lilliput.
DAYLIGHT (2013)
The glitch effects become a beyond belief distraction, turning “Daylight” into a frustratingly annoying viewing experience begging to be disliked.
TRANCERS: CITY OF LOST ANGELS (1988)
While diehards will be pleased to see Tim Thomerson and Helen Hunt in their “Trancers” prime, the reality is that “City of Lost Angels” doesn’t register as much more than a brief blip on the radar.
KING KONG (1933)
Whether trashing train tracks or inspecting bloody wounds with incredulity, “King Kong” is always focused on its star’s personal odyssey throughout the ever-escalating action.
THE EVIL CLERGYMAN (1988)
This is a unique case where a movie reads far better for having a quarter-century gap between production and public consumption.
DAY OF THE MUMMY (2014)
There is so much bizarreness in “Day of the Mummy” that it might make for weirdly fascinating entertainment if it weren’t so ploddingly boring.
DON'T LOOK IN THE BASEMENT (1973)
“Basement” is too goofy to be in the same league as its darker drive-in brethren, and too boring to ever warrant a second trip inside its not mysterious enough walls.
“M3GAN 2.0” should be much more fun than it is. On paper, the details powering its premise probably sounded like a real riot.