Pizza Movie: For whatever reason, stoner comedies went out of fashion even earlier than broader comedies did. As somebody who was a teenager during the era of Grandma's Boy, Pineapple Express, and the Harold and Kumar franchise, this subgenre spawned a fair share of formative comedy movie experiences for me, and I'll always cherish being just the right age during what ended up being the end of the golden era of bong rip cinema. Brian McElhaney and Nick Kocher, better known as the sketch comedy duo BriTANick, also grew up during the final days of goofy reefer madness on the big screen and got the chance to resurrect this genre for their directorial debut Pizza Movie. While Pizza Movie was unfortunately relegated to a streaming release on Hulu, it nevertheless succeeds in its quest to bring back this specific breed of dumb comedy.
In a shocking development, Pizza Movie follows the epic journey of two otherwise friendless college roommates (Gaten Matarazzo, Sean Giambrone-who do a good job capturing the dynamic of close friends who are in the middle of a spat and trying to navigate an incredibly difficult situation) attempting to get to the lobby of their building to pick up the pizza they ordered after taking an experimental psychedelic drug called M.I.N.T.S. that they discovered a tin full of in their dorm room after a particularly tough day on campus. As the creator (a perfectly cast Sarah Sherman) of M.I.N.T.S. explains via a lo-fi YouTube video, the high features seven stages of hallucinations that are broken up by brief periods of lucidity and if they somehow can't get to their pizza by the end of the seventh stage, their bad high could turn into something much worse. With the drug's seven distinct phases and the series of obstacles they face within their dorm (a group of authoritarian RA's hellbent on cracking down on partying, run-ins with their bullies that include their former friend played by Lulu Wilson, the pizza being delivered by a robot that can't climb stairs or ride on the elevator), Pizza Movie kind of plays out like a video game with various levels/enemies to defeat. The hyperactive revolving door nature of the plot and characters proves to be fertile ground for bits as McElhaney and Kocher toss out a relentless onslaught of absurdity. Not everything hits as intended, but the dedication to putting these characters into insane new situations is admirable and the jokes that do work are often very funny. I believe that McElhaney and Kocher have a really great comedy in them and I'll be eager to see if they can make it happen.
Grade: B
Faces of Death: Daniel Goldhaber's remake of the controversial 1978 horror movie that was widely believed to be depicting real murders at the time of its release feels like a bit of a missed opportunity. Goldhaber and his writing partner Isa Mazzei came with a great meta hook revolving around a serial killer (Dacre Montgomery) who's recreating the murders from the first film and uploading them to a TikTok-esque social media platform and a content moderator (Barbie Ferreira) for the platform who pretty quickly becomes convinced these videos are real and sets out on a dangerous mission to bring the perpetrator to justice after everyone around her tells her she's crazy for believing these videos are depicting real murders. The problem is that the commentary on how desensitized our culture has become to violence in the internet era is incredibly surface level and Goldhaber refuses to keep his foot on the gas-which leads to some pretty long lulls where nothing overly compelling or shocking happening on screen. Montgomery's eerie performance, the gloriously grainy 35mm photography from Isaac Bauman and some tense, well-crafted setpieces are enough to rescue the film from the depths of mediocrity, but it's just hard to get too excited about this being a decent movie when there was a visible path to greatness that could've been followed.
Grade: B-
You, Me & Tuscany: Folks, a 2000's romcom has fallen out of a wormhole and into theaters in April 2026. Don't say miracles can't happen anymore! You, Me & Tuscany brings the most insane Pinterest vision board ever conceived to life with an appropriately light touch from veteran director Kat Coiro (Marry Me, A Case of You) and fully sincere execution of its absurd love story. Every single plot beat can be telegraphed from a million miles away, but there's enough kooky side characters (the chipper, sandwich-scarfing cab driver played by Marco Calvani was my favorite), lush Italian scenery and chemistry between Halle Bailey and Rege Jean-Page to forgive its predictability. Watching an easygoing, totally fine romcom on the big screen is a rare treat these days, so big shoutout to Universal for keeping this former staple of the industry alive.
Grade: B-
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