This Tuesday on NCIS: New Orleans (CBS, 10/9c), FBI Special Agent Gregorio (new series regular Vanessa Ferlito) attempts to help Lasalle (Lucas Black) crack a personal mystery before she bids the Big Easy adieu.
RelatedVeteran NCIS Producers Named New Showrunners
In the sneak peek above, the pair are tracking a Navy Seal candidate’s last whereabouts prior to being murdered when Lasalle conspicuously dodges a persistent woman’s phone call. Does he have a potential “bunny boiler” on his hands, Gregorio asks? And why is she asking, if she plans to bolt Nola once the cartel case is closed? Press...
RelatedVeteran NCIS Producers Named New Showrunners
In the sneak peek above, the pair are tracking a Navy Seal candidate’s last whereabouts prior to being murdered when Lasalle conspicuously dodges a persistent woman’s phone call. Does he have a potential “bunny boiler” on his hands, Gregorio asks? And why is she asking, if she plans to bolt Nola once the cartel case is closed? Press...
- 11/14/2016
- TVLine.com
President-in-peril thriller White House Down deserves a second chance, while Computer Chess is nerdy but nice
I am writing this week's column from a temporary perch in the Hollywood Hills, so you could be forgiven for thinking that Tinseltown – and, indeed, America in general – has got to me when I say that the best DVD out this week is White House Down (Sony, 12). But I've been championing Roland Emmerich's splendidly daft president-in-peril thriller since its cinema release last year – one that was greeted with disappointing indifference from mainstream audiences already full from the gung-ho pleasures of the identically premised Olympus Has Fallen.
That's a shame, since White House Down is, in every sense, the superior meathead movie. The narrative – a paramilitary terrorist group seizes the White House, and it's up to One Good Man, sturdily named Capitol cop John Cale (Channing Tatum), to save the day – is a scrawled-on-the-back-of-a-matchbook...
I am writing this week's column from a temporary perch in the Hollywood Hills, so you could be forgiven for thinking that Tinseltown – and, indeed, America in general – has got to me when I say that the best DVD out this week is White House Down (Sony, 12). But I've been championing Roland Emmerich's splendidly daft president-in-peril thriller since its cinema release last year – one that was greeted with disappointing indifference from mainstream audiences already full from the gung-ho pleasures of the identically premised Olympus Has Fallen.
That's a shame, since White House Down is, in every sense, the superior meathead movie. The narrative – a paramilitary terrorist group seizes the White House, and it's up to One Good Man, sturdily named Capitol cop John Cale (Channing Tatum), to save the day – is a scrawled-on-the-back-of-a-matchbook...
- 1/19/2014
- by Guy Lodge
- The Guardian - Film News
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