Equals is composed of small, sensual moments which build to a climax that feels both gut-wrenching and potently universal, like an old torch song to which you already know all the words
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43 EDT A merican director Drake Doremus made his name with Like Crazy and Breathe In, a pair of films about obstacle
Equals, starring Nicholas Hoult and Kristen Stewart, is a thought-provoking glimpse into what romance will look like in a sci-fi future
July 14, 2016 Kristen Stewart and Nicolas Hoult in 'Equals
" Starring Nicholas Hoult and Kristen Stewart and backed by Ridley Scott
The film’s final destination may be familiar, especially if you’ve ever seen a Shakespeare play, but that’s not to its detriment
Yes, it is part dystopian, part Sci-Fi but at the heart of the film is the love story – one more about emotional connection than lust
15 minutes into Drake Doremus’ sci-fi, Equals
The movie is 2hr and 40 min(?) and I would have been happy to watch another hour
Upgraded, from actor turned director Carlson Young, offers Mendes the much-deserved chance to act her age – or, at least, a scrappy third-tier assistant old enough to
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Top Gun: Maverick pulls off a feat even trickier than a 4G inverted dive, delivering a long-belated sequel that surpasses its predecessor in wildly entertaining style
With Taylor Russell, Logan Miller, Deborah Ann Woll, Thomas Cocquerel
1h 38m
Equals tells the story of a utopian-like society where people suppress all emotions
The series has grossed over $5
Movie review of EQUALS a science fiction romance film starring Nicholas Hoult and Kristen Stewart and directed by Drake Doremus
"Home Alone 3" (1997) 20th Century Fox
Having dealt with the tragedies and perils of his own family, he must try to help a friend along a similar journey
In “Top Gun: Maverick,” the breathless, gravity and logic-defying “Top Gun” sequel that somehow makes all the sense in the world despite landing more than three decades after the late Tony Scott’s original, an admiral refers to Tom Cruise’s navy aviator Pete Mitchell—call sign “Maverick”—as “the
Upgraded, from actor turned director Carlson Young, offers Mendes the much-deserved chance to act her age – or, at least, a scrappy third-tier assistant old enough to have a master’s degree in Sci-fi drama from the director of "Like Crazy" looks like a grown-up film, but it's a familiar teen romance
When a gregarious psycho killer played by Toby Huss enters the precinct house with party balloons and a machine gun, several varieties of “all hell” break loose