“She never goes into the water — the whole thing is just an excuse for the audience to catch a good look at her body. The moment implicates us.”— Anne Cohen, refinery29.com
“What do all the best movie chefs have in common? For one, they’re not just good at what they do.”— Nikita Richardson, grubstreet.com
“With ‘Ma,’ Tate Taylor has crafted a horror movie that’s hard to look away from—as much as you might want to.”— Max Cea, gq.com
“The first half of the two-and-a-half-minute trailer plays like a goofy buddy comedy starring Leonardo DiCaprio as Western actor Rick Dalton and his stuntman, Cliff Booth (Brad Pitt). The two pal around on various sets, and Leo roasts some Nazis with a flamethrower in a movie, but once Dalton realize…”— River Donaghey, vice.com
“When you asked me what was saddest for me when I thought it was gone—and anybody at Marvel can tell you—it’s this very strange and attached relationship to Rocket. Rocket is me, he really is, even if that sounds narcissistic. Groot is like my dog.”— Mike Fleming Jr, deadline.com
“Now the question is, can Paramount Animation re-do an entire movie in a few months' time?”— AJ Willingham, cnn.com
“There are those big set-piece callbacks to movies you may not have seen (imagine how confused you would be by Tilda Swinton’s appearance if you didn’t see Doctor Strange), but there are also character beats and in-jokes that only work if you have obsessively re-watched at least a portion of the 21 f…”— Luis Paez-Pumar, theconcourse.deadspin.com
“You know, the cat would get on set and have to get acclimated, so all the actors would have to shut up and just kind of let the cat sniff everything for like ten minutes. So, we just sat there, and watched the cat.”— Dennis Widmyer, ew.com
“This could have been the best Academy Awards ever. Instead, there’s a good chance that Anne Hathaway and James Franco’s sad 2011 performance will be inching up the list.”— Anne Cohen, refinery29.com
“Just because you're not in love doesn't mean you shouldn't post up with a good movie.”— Tom Philip, gq.com
“Yes, it is all shockingly wicked and evil and vile. Shouldn’t we maybe just leave it at that?”— Richard Lawson, vanityfair.com
“Stuck between the wave of atomic monsters in the ‘50s and the formation of modern horror as we know it in the ‘70s, the ‘60s is a little harder to pinpoint.”— Meagan Navarro, bloody-disgusting.com
“Some true movie fans crave a more immersive experience. Standing where the characters in their favorite films stood. Taking in the same view.”— Maggie Fremont, apartmenttherapy.com
“What's more frustrating for its tens of fans, the story ended on a cliffhanger.”— Kate Aurthur, buzzfeednews.com
“This movie is like a Parent Trap/Princess Diaries/90 Day Fiance mash-up and it is wild. Vanessa Hudgens plays an uptight baker from Chicago AND a loosey-goosey princess excited to see the world.”— Nora Taylor, manrepeller.com
“This has been a tumultuous, surprising and, in the end, rewarding year for films.”— THR Staff, hollywoodreporter.com
“There is nothing more debated in the whole world than the styling in Love, Actually. Some people love it; some people hate (actually) it.”— Amelia Diamond, manrepeller.com
“Iris, in the movies, we have leading ladies and we have the best friend. You, I can tell, are a leading lady, but for some reason, you're behaving like the best friend.”— Nancy Meyers, Arthur Abbott, Eli Wallach, imdb.com
“My name is Richard. So what else do you need to know? Stuff about my family, or where I'm from? None of that matters. Not once you cross the ocean and cut yourself loose, looking for something more beautiful, something more exciting and yes, I admit, something more dangerous. So after eighteen hours…”— John Hodge, Richard, Leonardo Dicaprio, imdb.com