Death Wish 3 (1985) Review – This entry was epic!
Death Wish 3 doesn’t just continue the franchise—it detonates it. By 1985, subtlety was no longer part of Paul Kersey’s...
Death Wish 3 doesn’t just continue the franchise—it detonates it. By 1985, subtlety was no longer part of Paul Kersey’s...
Death Wish II doesn’t ease back into Paul Kersey’s world—it rips the wound open again. Eight years after the original...
Death Wish isn’t just a thriller—it’s a flashpoint. Released in 1974, it arrived at a moment when urban crime headlines...
Family of Cops III: Under Suspicion closes out the Fein trilogy with a steady, character-driven finale that feels reflective without...
Breach of Faith: A Family of Cops 2 continues the Fein family story with a stronger sense of unity and...
Donato and Daughter isn’t a high-octane Bronson vehicle. It’s quieter, more character-driven, and built around tension that simmers rather than...
Kinjite: Forbidden Subjects is not an easy watch—and it was never meant to be. Released in 1989, this marked the...
Assassination is pure late-’80s Cannon energy—lean, pulpy, and built around the unwavering presence of Charles Bronson. Directed by Peter R....
Murphy’s Law arrives late in the Charles Bronson action cycle, but it refuses to coast on reputation. Directed once again...
The Evil That Men Do is one of the darkest entries in Charles Bronson’s 1980s action run. Stripped of flashy...