‘The Smashing Machine’ Review: Dwayne Johnson’s Career-Best Performance
Dwayne Johnson reinvents himself in The Smashing Machine, shedding his blockbuster persona for a vulnerable, career-best performance. Emily Blunt matches him with brilliance in a heartbreaking drama from Benny Safdie that goes far beyond the MMA ring.
In an era dominated by remakes and requels, Silent Night, Deadly Night returns not as a hollow exercise in nostalgia, but as a slasher that understands both its legacy and its controversy. Originally released in 1984 to intense backlash, the film has long occupied a strange place in horror history—reviled by some, embraced by genre fans. This new iteration doesn’t shy away from that baggage; instead, it reworks the story with intention, justifying its existence through bold narrative choices and a clear affection for the slasher tradition.