Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega are a dad and daughter who run into magical beasts in "Death of a Unicorn." The stars spill on that "really sweet" ending.
"Death of a Unicorn," in theaters Friday, loses track of the comedy by failing to ground its outrageous premise in reality.
The title of the movie, which stars Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega, gives away the overly long film's only surprise, writes Moira Macdonald.
A bloody Big Pharma horror-satire gets stuck on its own horn.
It’s increasingly difficult to get people under 40—or, for that matter, anybody—out to movie theaters, but in the past few years, one genre has held consistent allure: Fantasy and fantasy-horror, movies fixated on wild scenarios and manufactured,
Paul Rudd and Jenna Ortega star in a gory comedy about an attempt to exploit the healing power of unicorns—and the violent destruction it unleashes.
Attorney Elliot (Paul Rudd) has a hot tub "meeting" with Shepard (Will Poulter) until the weird sounds start in a scene from "Death of a Unicorn."