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The first hour, which plays like a romantic comedy perched on the edge of a hellmouth, is more novel than what comes after. But even when The Gorge disappears into generic run-and-shoot action ...
An identical tower sits across the gorge. In that one is Drasa (Anya Taylor-Joy), a dark-haired Lithuanian agent. We first see her paying a visit to her accordion-playing father, and we meet Levi ...
consummate their love before enduring the first of many easily foreseen high-concept problems: Levi falling into the gorge during his precarious trip back across. It’s here that the gears shift ...
She sends Levi to the gorge, a journey he makes first by plane, then parachute, then on foot. There, he meets his predecessor, who explains the assignment. The watchtower is self-sufficient with a ...
Two hawk-eyed snipers (Miles Teller and Anya Taylor-Joy) are hired to guard a mysterious, misty gorge. Together, they fight the creatures that lurk below, and discover the secret of this massive ...
The Gorge is what I like to call a madlibs movie. It's like someone took all the most ridiculous ideas a movie could have and put them into one film. Although I would be the first to crack jokes ...
He’s got a lot of questions about the area, the job and why the Western stewards aren’t allowed to contact the person manning the gorge’s east side. But J.D. doesn’t have many answers ...
I like big dumb movies. “The Gorge,” a new film on Apple TV+ directed by Scott Derrickson, is kind of big and a lot dumb. And there are monsters! Despite that, and a talented (if tiny) ...
The first half of The Gorge is nicely paced, keeping us guessing not just about Levi and Drasa and where this is all going but also the otherworldly unknown forces they are guarding over.
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