Skip to main content

New movies this week: Uncharted, Dog, The Cursed

After a barren January that saw only a handful of noteworthy new releases in movie theaters, February promises to deliver a wide variety of films. This weekend offers three diverse movies to suit anyone’s mood: A video game adaptation starring Peter Parker and Dirk Diggler, a road trip movie with Magic Mike and a canine, and a moody werewolf movie set in the 19th century.

It can be hard to figure out what you should spend your hard-earned dollars on, so Digital Trends will round up movie reviews from leading print and online publications to give you a comprehensive critical consensus of the films that are opening each weekend.

Recommended Videos

Uncharted

UNCHARTED - Final Trailer (HD)

Most positive review: “[…] Director Ruben Fleischer‘s film is tight as a drum, moving quickly from one set piece to the next without the momentum flagging once.” — Liz Shannon Miller, Consequence Film

Average review: “Here is a movie that springs from a video game long hailed for being so cinematic and vibrant — and yet the movie fails to live up to that promising foundation.” — Richard Roeper, The Chicago Sun-Times

Most negative review: “In many respects, Uncharted feels less cinematic than its source material, lacking the games’ interest in their lore and environments or watching characters grow by confronting their assumptions and biases.” — Jack Cole, Slant Magazine

Consensus: If you keep your expectations low, Uncharted can be enjoyable as throwaway entertainment. Fans of the video game, however, may be disappointed by the changes the film makes to the characters and story that made it a hit to begin with.

Dog

DOG | Official Trailer | MGM Studios

Most positive review:Dog is the kind of movie that will divide audiences into two uneven camps: Those surprised to discover that it’s actually good, and those disappointed to learn that it’s not astoundingly great.” — David Ehrlich, IndieWire

Average review: “More predictable than shaggy, Dog is more interesting than the standard man-mutt buddy movie but still never really pulls the heartstrings. What it lacks in urgency and emotion, Tatum more than makes up for in movie-star wattage.” — staff writer, Empire Online

Most negative review: “Dog wants to be that sturdy plane movie you find hard to surf past when you see it on cable in the ensuing years and while it looks and sounds the part […], there’s not the slick storytelling and big emotional beats to match.” — Benjamin Lee, The Guardian

Consensus: While not completely devoid of clichés, Dog has enough charm and heart to win over most audiences. Tatum is in particular a standout, and the movie serves as a reminder he’s one of Hollywood’s most underrated stars.

The Cursed

THE CURSED | Official Trailer | In Theaters February 18

Most positive review: “Haunting, harrowing, and hypnotic, [The Cursed] is a werewolf story with a lot on its mind. You’ll never look at a scarecrow the same way again.” — Ben Pearson, Slash Film

Average review: “[…] The Cursed is gorgeously crafted end to end, with sharp, well-paced editing and aptly icy cinematography that finds horror everywhere it lurks, even on an ordinary kitchen counter with a dead rabbit waiting to be cooked.” — Tomris Laffly, Variety

Most negative review: “It’s a great-looking movie, with a fine cast (Reilly is particularly good) and a workable premise. The raw materials were clearly in place. Too bad they never came together.” — Jason Bailey, The Playlist 

Consensus: Better than your average werewolf horror film, The Cursed rises above the pack with its memorable visuals and unusually fine performances from its cast.

Topics
Jason Struss
Section Editor, Entertainment
Jason is a writer, editor, and pop culture enthusiast whose love for cinema, television, and cheap comic books has led him to…
Does The Super Mario Bros. Movie have an end credits scene?
Mario, Peach, and Toad stand above the clouds together in The Super Mario Bros. Movie.

Once upon a time, it was rare for a movie to have a post-credits scene, but those days are long past. Nowadays, it’s increasingly rare for a major blockbuster or franchise movie to not have a mid or post-credits scene attached to it. With that in mind, audiences will likely head into The Super Mario Bros. Movie this week wondering whether or not they’ll miss anything if they don’t stick around for the film’s admittedly lengthy end credits.

The new film is Hollywood’s latest attempt to capitalize off of the success of one of the most iconic video game properties in history. Coming 30 years after 1993’s famously lackluster Super Mario Bros., the new outing is an animated adventure that offers moviegoers the chance to journey through some of the most iconic fictional video game worlds with an equally recognizable cast of Nintendo characters.

Read more
Apple TV+’s Tetris shows movies about video games are the next big thing
tetris apple tv plus movies about video games next big thing movie poster 3

After more than a decade of unprecedented dominance over Hollywood, the reign of superhero comic book adaptations may finally be coming to an end. The once-bulletproof Marvel Cinematic Universe has seen its first box office disappointment in Ant-Man and the Wasp: Quantumania, and returning Disney CEO Bob Iger has pumped the brakes on the nonstop parade of forgettable streaming shows.
DC Films has entered a rebuilding phase after Dwayne Johnson’s long-awaited Black Adam failed to make a splash, and The CW’s sprawling Arrowverse is coming to an end after a cumulative 41 seasons across eight television titles. While the comic book movie may yet rebound in the years ahead, its place in the zeitgeist is rapidly being conquered by another arena maligned by older generations: video games.

Has the video game movie curse lifted?

Read more
All the Scream horror movies, ranked from worst to best
A masked person walks towards the camera in Scream VI.

Early reviews for Scream VI are lauding it as a new peak for the veteran franchise and the best entry since the game-changing 1996 original. Coming from the one-of-a-kind mind of the late great Wes Craven, Scream is the rare franchise that never runs out of steam. Thanks to a premise designed to reinvent itself with each new entry, Scream is the gift that keeps on giving, to the point where it wouldn't be an overstatement to say every chapter in the series is among the all-time best horror movies.

While every entry in the series ranges from "good" to "great," we can still rank them from worst to best. No fan's ranking will look the same; some might be OG Scream purists, while others will insist 2022's Scream is the new blueprint. However, we can all admit there are no weak entries in this franchise, with each film adding something to Ghostface's lore while cementing Scream as a cinematic horror institution.
5. Scream 3 (2000)

Read more