Arts & Entertainment

Movie Reviews: Percy Jackson, Elysium, We're the Millers

Find movie reviews written by Patch blogger Mark Glass and other local St. Louis critics.

Before you look for movie showtimes this weekend, remember to check out these movie reviews on Patch. These reviews come from Patch blogger Mark Glass and other local St. Louis critics. 

Are you a movie buff? Or maybe you just enjoy the occasional dinner and a movie date? Either way, Patch would be thrilled to have you on board as a movie blogger! All you have to do is shoot a quick email to Ryan Martin at ryan.martin@patch.com.

--

Percy Jackson: Sea of Monsters

Find out what's happening in Hazelwoodwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Mark Glass, Patch blogger"** This is the second feature film based on a series of popular fantasy novels for young adults. It chronicles adventures of a contemporary teen who happens to be the son of the Greek Sea God Poseidon and a mortal mom. In this round, Percy lives with fellow half-bloods..." Full Review

--

Find out what's happening in Hazelwoodwith free, real-time updates from Patch.

Elysium  

Joe Williams, The St. Louis Post-Dispatch"It seems contradictory, but the secret ingredient in a great science-fiction film is realism. We want to see a reflection of the world we inhabit, even if it’s coming from another planet. In the case ofElysium, the titular outpost is a satellite circling the earth. If you recognize this world of mansions..." Full Review

Stephanie Zacharek, The Riverfront Times"In Neill Blomkamp's dystopian science-fiction fantasy Elysium, Damon's Max is a tattooed grunt stranded on the Earth of the future, a dismal, dried-out planet filled with have-nots living short, brutish lives. The rich have long ago decamped to their own shiny, inhabitable satellite, Elysium, where plants..." Full Review

--

We're the Millers  

Inkoo Kang, The Riverfront Times"Horrible Bosses co-stars Jason Sudeikis and Jennifer Aniston team up again as reluctant drug mules in We're the Millers. But this film's eagerness to please functions as a slow poison, draining The Millers of its vitality by rendering its characterization uneven, its potential undeveloped, and its plot predictable and stupid. Sudeikis can't find a center amid..." Full Review


Get more local news delivered straight to your inbox. Sign up for free Patch newsletters and alerts.

We’ve removed the ability to reply as we work to make improvements. Learn more here

More from Hazelwood