Archives

Categories will get pulled under Archives once the season is over.

Film & TV: Daredevil (Season 3)

TLS tries to redeem themselves by offering up a review of Netflix/Marvel joint venture Daredevil, Season 3.
[Aggregate score: 9]

 

Film & TV: American Vandal (Season 2)

TLS put on their big boy pants to investigate fecal-related crimes along with American Vandal Season 2.
[Aggregate score: 10]

Film & TV: First Man

TLS takes one giant step towards deciding if Neil Armstrong’s personal story makes for quality film.
[Aggregate score: 8.6]

 

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Halloween 4: The Return of Michael Myers

MOTS-O-Ween 2018 concludes with The Return of Another Hollywood Halloween cash-grab. All trick, no treat! [Aggregate score 2.75]

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Creature From the Black Lagoon (1954)

In the Amazon jungle, a lonely merman’s paradise is permanently polluted and his courtship curtailed by colonialists with spears, nets, and too many outfits in 1954’s “Creature from the Black Lagoon.” [Aggregate score 5.25]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: The Invisible Man (1933)

Chaos, madness, train wrecks and unhealthy relationships are all topics of discussion in our review of “The Invisible Man,” starring the voice of Claude Rains. [Aggregate score 8.33]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: The Mummy (1932)

TLS unearths some recurring themes, a couple fine performances and a creepy love triangle from the sarcophagus of 1932’s “The Mummy.” [Aggregate score 6.75]

 

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Frankenstein (1931)

Angry mobs with torches, the titular doctor’s madness and a nameless monster in love, bring discussions of creators and creations in 1931’s “Frankenstein.” [Aggregate score 7.6]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: The Wolf Man (1941)

A new moon, wolfsbane in bloom and a voyeur’s intent is thwarted by a band of gypsies, a wolf and a discussion on the duplicity of the human condition in our review of 1941’s “The Wolf Man.”  [Aggregate score 7.75]

 

MOTS-O-Ween 2018: Dracula (1931)

TLS scare up Universal’s oeuvre of monsters for this year’s MOTS-O-Ween, starting with a discussion of vampires, stalkers and European economics in 1931’s “Dracula” starring Bela Lugosi. Leave the bugs, bring the garlic.  [Aggregate score 8]