‘Sinners’ Review: From Dusk Till Dawn
The post ‘Sinners’ Review: From Dusk Till Dawn appeared on BitcoinEthereumNews.com.
Sinners Credit: Warner Bros Two brothers on the run from their dark past make their way south. They come to a rowdy bar in the middle of nowhere. Some rip-roaring music plays and people drink and dance and let loose for the night. Then everything goes straight to hell when an ancient evil rears its ugly head. Spoilers follow. Of course, I’m not describing Ryan Coogler’s new period horror movie, Sinners. I’m talking about Quentin Tarantino and Robert Rodriguez’s campy 1996 crime/vampire flick From Dusk Till Dawn. Actually, I’m describing both movies at the same time, because while Sinners may be closer to a literary work than a B-movie, the two films have a remarkably similar structure, right down to some very specific plot points that I won’t spoil here. This isn’t a ding against Coogler’s film. Sinners is brilliant. It contains one of the single best sequences I have ever seen in any film, a moment that transcends time and space, that is as much poetry as it is cinematography. A scene that could only work in this specific medium in the hands of a genuinely skilled filmmaker. But there’s no denying that Sinners and From Dusk Till Dawn draw from the same bloody well. Two Tales Of Two Brothers From Dusk Till Dawn is about a pair of brothers (George Clooney and a deliciously psychotic Quentin Tarantino) on the run from the law who kidnap a family (Harvey Keitel plays a retired preacher and Juliette Lewis plays his daughter, who along with her brother are on a family roadtrip gone terribly wrong). The brothers hide in the family’s RV and escape with them across the Mexican border, where they come to a massive trucker stripclub where they’ve set a meet. From Dusk Till Dawn Credit: Miramax The only…
Filed under: News - @ April 18, 2025 5:18 pm