EntertainmentMoviesThe 34 greatest movies from the 2010s you forgot aboutWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
EntertainmentMoviesThe 34 greatest movies from the 2010s you forgot aboutWhen you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.Here’s how it works.
(Image credit: RLJE Films)

The 2010s will go down in the entertainment history books as the decade when mainstream movies got unfathomably big and online streaming supplanted cable and home video. But with so many more movies released than ever before, what films actually slipped under the radar? Better yet, what 2010s movies have we collectively all forgotten about?
As tentpole franchises with budgets amounting to hundreds of millions apiece choked out theaters, a number of smaller movies with comparatively leaner price tags made their way to various streaming and Video on Demand platforms. While some of these “smaller” movies still drew attention, not all of them kept a lasting place in the wider consciousness. Sometimes, it feels like these movies were wiped from memory, even when they’re still right there on your streaming queues.
Despite whatever critical acclaim and box office revenue they might have generated, these are 34 of the greatest movies between 2010 and 2019 that you might have forgotten about until just now.
34. Sleight (2016)
(Image credit: Blumhouse)

Lurking beneath the dominance of superhero blockbusters in the late 2010s, director J.D. Dillard made his feature-directing debut with his microbudget genre-bender Sleight. Teenager Bo (Jacob Latimore) lives a double life as an L.A. street magician - dazzling pedestrians with his tricks of levitation - and a low-level drug dealer for a crime kingpin. Eventually things escalate, and Bo must use his magic tricks to fend off his bloodthirsty crime boss (Dulé Hill). A riveting picture that effortlessly blends crime/revenge stories with coming-of-ageandsuperhero origin conventions, Sleight is a quality experience that is no illusion.
33. Love & Mercy (2014)
(Image credit: Lionsgate)

From director Bill Pohlad, Love & Mercy is a stunning, sympathetic biopic about Beach Boys frontman Brian Wilson and his well-documented battles with severe mental illness. Paul Dano and John Cusack together play Wilson at different times in his life, with Elizabeth Banks and Paul Giamatti co-starring as Wilson’s second wife and psychologist respectively. Set during both the making of the Beach Boys’ hit album Pet Sounds and Wilson’s therapy in the ‘80s, Love & Mercy immerses audiences beyond the recording studio and into the warped soul of one of rock music’s most easy going artists. While creative liberties are taken, Wilson has gone on record saying the movie is “very factual” in a 2015 interview with Chicago Tribune.
32. Legendary (2010)
(Image credit: Samuel Goldwyn Films)

Before his mainstream Hollywood stardom, John Cena split his time between championship reigns in WWE and cutting his teeth as a screen actor. In just his third movie, Legendary, released in 2010, Cena is thrust into a dramatic light as a fresh-from-prison ex-convict who coaches his estranged younger brother (Devon Graye) after he joins the high school wrestling team. Although Legendary is painfully maudlin and uninspired, with even prestigious supporting actors like Patricia Clarkson and Danny Glover set to autopilot, it’s notable for featuring a deadly serious John Cena still learning to grapple the nuances of his secondary, post-WWE craft.
Legendary$6.99at Amazon$9.95at Walmart$9.95at Walmart
Legendary
$6.99at Amazon$9.95at Walmart$9.95at Walmart
$6.99at Amazon
$9.95at Walmart
$9.95at Walmart
31. Bone Tomahawk (2015)
(Image credit: RLJ Entertainment)

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Bone Tomahawk$16.70at Amazon
Bone Tomahawk
$16.70at Amazon
$16.70at Amazon
30. Water for Elephants (2011)
(Image credit: 20th Century Studios)

Released during the height of Robert Pattinson’s Twilight-era fame, Water for Elephants features Pattinson co-starring in a handsome yet woefully overlooked period romance with an enchanting, if admittedly mismatched Reese Witherspoon. Based on a 2006 novel, the movie tells of a young med school dropout (Pattinson) who hops aboard a circus train and becomes engrossed in the circus world, as well as falling for one of its beautiful performers (Witherspoon). Though Witherspoon and Pattinson lack the precise chemistry for Water for Elephants to quench thirst, it is still a sweet romantic gem to remedy all who are lovesick.
29. About Time (2013)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

Rachel McAdams seems to have a thing for falling for men who control time. After starring in 2009’s The Time Traveler’s Wife but before appearing in 2016’s Doctor Strange, McAdams was the object of affection for Domnhall Gleason in 2013’s About Time. The movie, from director Richard Curtis, follows a young man (Gleason) who travels in time to engineer his happily-ever-after with a beautiful woman (McAdams). While critics and audiences found About Time’s loosey-goosey grasp with time travel frustrating, it still succeeds as both a delightful rom-com and a warning against playing with fate.
28. Apostle (2018)
(Image credit: Netflix)

In this mesmerizing goth action-horror from Gareth Evans, Dan Stevens plays a man from 1905 trying to rescue his sister from the clutches of a mysterious Satanic cult. While Apostle first appears to be fashioned in the style of most austere folk and cult horror movies, like The Wicker Man, The Witch, and Midsommar, its later explosions of violence reminds you that Evans was also the mastermind behind some of the greatest martial arts movies of the 2010s: The Raid duology. Evans’ surreal mixture of the two flavors combines into a fine instance of cinematic cuisine, conjuring both scares in its horror and fist-pumping excitement with its gruesome action.
27. Joshy (2016)
(Image credit: Lionsgate)

26. Hold the Dark (2018)
(Image credit: Netflix)

25. Columbus (2017)
(Image credit: Sundance Institute)

24. Rush (2013)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

23. Beginners (2010)
(Image credit: Focus Features)

22. As Above/So Below (2014)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

21. Ode to Joy (2019)
(Image credit: IFC Films)

20. Bunraku (2010)
(Image credit: ARC Entertainment)

A stylish under-the-radar action movie with an arresting color palette and a star-studded cast, Guy Moshe’s Bunraku (a title sourced from traditional Japanese puppet theater) tells of a cowboy without a gun (Josh Hartnett) and a samurai without a sword (Japanese rock star Gackt) who team up on a quest of revenge against a feared crime lord known as “The Woodcutter” (Ron Perlman). Woody Harrelson, Kevin McKidd, and Demi Moore round out the movie, playing equally colorful characters who are as exaggerated as the movie’s unusual mise-en-scène. While Bunraku is a multi-genre hybrid blending Westerns, samurai, and crime epics - and a healthy dosage of pulp aesthetics - it is still so singularly original, a movie that stands on its own two feet.
19. The Belko Experiment (2016)
(Image credit: Orion Pictures)

In this gory workplace satire from writerJames Gunnand director Greg McLean, an American office staff working abroad in Colombia are suddenly forced into a violent challenge where theymustkill each other until the last one stands - or else, they willalldie. Think Mike Judge’s Office Space crossed with Kinji Fukasaku’s Battle Royale, and you’re just about there. While not as provocative or insightful as it probably should be, The Belko Experiment makes for one hell of a good time in how much it sprinkles real gooey blood over our dead-end office jobs. John Gallagher Jr. leads an ensemble that also includes Tony Goldwyn, Adria Arjona, Sean Gunn, David Dastmalchian, and Michael Rooker.
(Image credit: Fox Searchlight Pictures)

17. Logan Lucky (2017)
(Image credit: Bleecker Street)

Logan Lucky7/10Watch at Hulu
Logan Lucky
7/10
7/10
![]()
7/10
Watch at Hulu
Watch at Hulu
16. A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night (2014)
(Image credit: Kino Lorber)

In Ana Lily Amipour’s stunning directing debut, the vampire movie genre gets relocated to modern day Iran with a vigilante vamp (Sheila Vand) who uses her monstrous powers to target inappropriate men. Harnessing feminine rage against sexual violence before the critical mass of #MeToo, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night subverts convention and expectations to deliver a creepy, satisfying experience that expands our collective image of vampires. Touching on themes like power, agency, and the inherent sexuality of vampire myths, A Girl Walks Home Alone at Night is worth sinking teeth into.
15. Yes, God, Yes (2019)
(Image credit: Vertical Entertainment)

Awkwardly and hilariously putting the “coming” in coming-of-age storytelling, Yes, God, Yes stars Natalie Dyer (Stranger Things) as Alice, a devout Catholic schoolgirl who fears eternal damnation when she develops inappropriate feelings after a spicy AOL chat room encounter. (Did we mention Yes, God, Yes is an early 2000s period piece? Talk about nostalgia!) After being sent to an abstinence camp, Alice is challenged even more when she meets a hot stud of a small group counselor. Hilarious and touching - emotionally, we mean - Yes, God, Yes is a darling movie that has us all at our knees.
14. MacGruber (2010)
(Image credit: Universal Pictures)

13. Locke (2013)
(Image credit: A24)

12. Midnight Special (2016)
(Image credit: Warner Bros. Pictures)

In a rare turn for Michael Shannon portraying “good” characters, the decorated actor plays a father who runs away with his son - escaping the reach of both the government and a religious cult - after they learn his son possesses strange alien powers. Like a superhero movie crossed with Amblin-era movies like E.T., Midnight Special breathes fresh air into worn-out genre tropes, paying homage to nostalgic sci-fi movies while grounding them in authentic artistic maturity. Joel Edgerton, Kirsten Dunst, Adam Driver, and Sam Shepard round out the cast in a movie that woefully performed poorly in theaters.
11. Colossal (2016)
(Image credit: NEON)

In Nacho Vigalondo’s second English-language feature film, an alcoholic writer (Anne Hathaway) moves back into her childhood home and reconnects with an old friend (Jason Sudeikis). In a bizarre twist of fate, Hathaway finds she’s psychically connected to a giant monster stomping its way through South Korea. An outlandish fusion of kaiju movies with surrealist dramas in the spirit of Being John Malkovich, Colossal is all about female agency, how men can make women feel small, and how monstrous alter egos can be a source of strength.
10. Mayhem (2017)
(Image credit: RLJE Films)

Just before Samara Weaving asserted her action film prowess with Ready or Not, she took part in Joe Lynch’s still underrated B-movie homage Mayhem. The Walking Dead’s Steven Yuen stars as Derek, a newly unemployed lawyer in a building suddenly quarantined for a dangerous virus that is inspiring everyone to act out their impulses. Aligning himself with a desperate client, Melanie (Weaving), Derek makes his way to the top floor to settle the matter of his unemployment, all whilst fighting off his former colleagues who are after a reward for his death. With a powerhouse Steven Yuen in what is basically 9-to-5 meets The Purge, Mayhem delights with exquisite, cathartic carnage.
9. Free Fire (2016)
(Image credit: A24)

One of the most forgotten movies in the A24 library, Free Fire is a stylish action-comedy built around the simple premise of “everyone shoots each other.” Brie Larson takes center stage in a film set in 1978, in which a black market deal goes belly up and everyone on all sides takes aim at one another. With a cast that includes Cillian Murphy, Armie Hammer, Sharlto Copley, Babou Ceesay, Sam Riley, and more, Free Fire may not amount to much more than its back-of-the-Blu-ray summary. But it’s got its moments, including one of the most hilarious John Denver needle drops of any movie.
8. They’re Watching (2016)
(Image credit: Amplify)

Years before The Curse lampooned the exploitative nature and artificiality of HGTV-like home programming, there was They’re Watching. From co-directors Jay Lender and Micah Wright, the crew of a home improvement television show travel to a remote European village and accidentally interrupt a private cult ritual. This incurs the wrath of supernatural forces, turning their production into a genuine nightmare. Beyond its amusing premise, They’re Watching impressively apes the format of home improvement shows, delighting in contrasting its alarmingly cheery vibes with the dark undercurrents of something truly evil.
7. Bad Words (2013)
(Image credit: Focus Features)

In actor Jason Bateman’s directing debut, the chaotic black comedy Bad Words stars Bateman as a 40-something grump who, thanks to a poorly phrased loophole, enters a national spelling bee competition to finish a quest of spiteful revenge. Darkly hilarious, abrasive, and gleefully offensive in ways that are increasingly rare to find in mainstream movies, Bad Words illuminates how there are not reallybadwords, only bad intentions.
6. Color Out of Space (2019)
(Image credit: RLJE Films)

5. Lucy in the Sky (2019)
(Image credit: Fox Searchlight Pictures)

4. The Night Comes For Us (2018)
(Image credit: Netflix)

3. Ingrid Goes West (2017)
(Image credit: NEON)

Aubrey Plaza and Elizabeth Olsen are finely attuned to director Matt Spicer’s wavelengths in Ingrid Goes West, a dark satire about the innate inhumanity of social media fame. After a Pennsylvania woman finishes her time in a mental health facility, she ventures to Los Angeles to engineer a “chance” meeting with her narcissistic Instagram idol Taylor Sloane (Elizabeth Olsen). A movie all about the emotional pitfalls of chasing lout, Ingrid Goes West has aged incredibly well as social media keeps a suffocating vice grip over our daily routines.
2. You Were Never Really Here (2017)
(Image credit: Amazon Studios)

With mesmerizing direction from Lynne Ramsay and a dependably committed Joaquin Phoenix, You Were Never Really Here is a sinewy, sinister hitman thriller with serious muscularity. Phoenix plays a psychologically haunted mercenary who uses his FBI-trained skills to rescue kidnapped girls from human trafficking networks. When a politician hires him to save his daughter, Phoenix is given permission to really bust heads and unleash hell, though not all is what it seems. Like a modern day Taxi Driver, You Were Never Really Here is arguably the movie Phoenix should have won his Oscar for instead of Joker a few years later.
1. Killing Them Softly (2012)
(Image credit: The Weinstein Company)

Post-recession cynicism and the unfulfilled promises of “hope” and “change” under Obama profoundly imbues Killing Them Softly, a powerhouse crime thriller that is still something of a best kept secret. In Andrew Dominik’s picture, Brad Pitt plays a hitman who is roped into dealing with a Mafia poker game robbery. While the movie bombards its underworld characters with the 2008 zeitgeist, their world is a metaphorical microcosm for America, from its hedonistic culture to its collapsible capitalist economy. Simply put, Killing Them Softly goes way hard, its story and themes hitting like a bullet to the head.
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GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"2Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"3Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"4Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands"5Cobra Kai season 6, part 2 review: “Returns to the sort of hard-hitting form that made it such a fan favorite in the first place”
GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"2Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"3Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"4Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands"5Cobra Kai season 6, part 2 review: “Returns to the sort of hard-hitting form that made it such a fan favorite in the first place”
GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"2Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"3Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"4Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands"5Cobra Kai season 6, part 2 review: “Returns to the sort of hard-hitting form that made it such a fan favorite in the first place”
GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension"2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package"3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure"4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years"5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths"1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show"2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie"3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action"4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien"5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite"1Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat"2Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses"3Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist"4Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands"5Cobra Kai season 6, part 2 review: “Returns to the sort of hard-hitting form that made it such a fan favorite in the first place”
GAME REVIEWSMOVIE REVIEWSTV REVIEWS
1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”
1Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”
1
Nemesis review: “A magical sense of tension”
2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”
2Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”
2
Arcs review: “A whole lot of game in a small package”
3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”
3Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”
3
Path of Exile 2 review: “A stellar start to a thrilling and brutal dark adventure”
4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years”
4Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years”
4
Indiana Jones and the Great Circle review: “The best adventure Indy has embarked on in over 30 years”
5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths”
5Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths”
5
Marvel Rivals review: “So preoccupied with trying to be like Overwatch that it forgets to play to its own strengths”
1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show”
1Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show”
1
Sonic the Hedgehog 3 review: “Keanu Reeves as Shadow is wasted whilst Jim Carrey steals the show”
2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie”
2Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie”
2
Mufasa: The Lion King review – “It’s no Hakuna Matata but this Disney origin story is a class above the 2019 movie”
3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”
3Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”
3
Kraven the Hunter review: “The insistence on an R-rating helps save this, with a decent helping of bloodthirsty action”
4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”
4The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”
4
The Lord of the Rings: The War of the Rohirrim review – “An uninspired expansion of the most iconic screen take on Tolkien”
5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”
5Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”
5
Nightbitch review: “Amy Adams' disappointing dark comedy is all bark and no bite”
1Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”
1Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”
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Doctor Who 2024 Christmas special review: “Ncuti Gatwa is as magnetic as ever in this delightful festive treat”
2Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses”
2Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses”
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Secret Level review: “An uneven experience with serious highlights that ultimately make up for the misses”
3Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”
3Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”
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Skeleton Crew review: “Perfectly captures the vibes of classic Star Wars with a swashbuckling twist”
4Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”
4Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”
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Creature Commandos review: “James Gunn’s heartwarming, R-rated tale about super-monsters proves that the DCU is in good hands”
5Cobra Kai season 6, part 2 review: “Returns to the sort of hard-hitting form that made it such a fan favorite in the first place”
5Cobra Kai season 6, part 2 review: “Returns to the sort of hard-hitting form that made it such a fan favorite in the first place”
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Cobra Kai season 6, part 2 review: “Returns to the sort of hard-hitting form that made it such a fan favorite in the first place”