Tag: Movie Review

  • “Sea Fever” Examines the Emotional Cost of Quarantine

    “Sea Fever” Examines the Emotional Cost of Quarantine

    Movies don’t exist out of context, and 2019’s Sea Fever (Prime Video) is no exception. Without our current situation, you could easily categorize this film as simple nautical horror in the same vein as Jaws or the more recent Underwater. It stands up as a fishing boat version of Alien. There’s a touch of The…

  • “The Willoughbys” Finds Light in the Darkness

    “The Willoughbys” Finds Light in the Darkness

    Bad Parents (and guardians) in children’s stories are nothing new. In stories like Matilda, Harry Potter, and Hansel and Gretel, protagonists are forced into the so-called “care” of adults whose selfishness and neglect create a pattern of abuse meant to give the protagonists the fortitude and courage to break off on their own. All of…

  • “Altered Carbon: Resleeved” is Like Watching a Long Video Game Cutscene…in a Bad Way

    “Altered Carbon: Resleeved” is Like Watching a Long Video Game Cutscene…in a Bad Way

    Overall, Altered Carbon: Resleeved is pretty “meh.” It’s cool and all that it takes a different approach from the TV show to make it animated rather than live action, but it doesn’t help that the animation looks like something from a video game.

  • Bad Trip- But an Excellent Comedy

    Bad Trip- But an Excellent Comedy

    Eric Andre’s new prank comedy film, Bad Trip, has me daydreaming about experiencing this level of performance art and comedy in my daily life and wishing more than anything that I could have been one of the extras in this film. Eric Andre created a mixture of scripted buddy comedy and hidden camera prank comedy…

  • ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ Review: Yes, I’m Still Team Kong

    ‘Godzilla vs. Kong’ Review: Yes, I’m Still Team Kong

    Kong bows to no one. The latest MonsterVerse film is the highly anticipated Godzilla vs. Kong. Directed by Adam Wingard and written by Eric Pearson and Max Borenstein, the movie follows the two most dominant alpha monsters on the planet as they clash with one another. Who will come out on top? Who will bow to the other? Or, is…

  • ‘Cherry’ Review: The Truth About Addiction

    ‘Cherry’ Review: The Truth About Addiction

    DISCLAIMER: This review contains spoilers. TW: extensive graphic drug abuse, disturbing and violent images, mentions of suicide, death, and depictions of PTSD. _______ After hitting it big in the MCU, the Russo brothers (Anthony and Joe) and Tom Holland team up for a very different collaboration. Cherry is a semi-autobiographical take on Nico Walker’s life. The film is divided into seven separate chapters and follows…

  • ‘Chaos Walking’ Review: The Good and the Bad

    ‘Chaos Walking’ Review: The Good and the Bad

    Doug Liman’s latest feature comes after a strenuous four years in the making. Based on the Chaos Walking trilogy by Patrick Ness, the film adapts the first book of the series, The Knife of Never Letting Go. As a fan of the books, I was curious to see how the story would transpire on the big screen.…

  • ‘Raya and the Last Dragon is a Disney Masterpiece

    ‘Raya and the Last Dragon is a Disney Masterpiece

    The story is a moving sentiment of letting go of the past and putting trust and faith into others. Though you come into this world alone, surrounding yourself with others that support you and want to help is the greatest gift life could ever give.

  • Review: ‘Dark Phoenix’ Failed to Present a Satisfying Finale

    Review: ‘Dark Phoenix’ Failed to Present a Satisfying Finale

    The final installment in the main X-Men storyline is Dark Phoenix. The film is a direct sequel to 2016’s X-Men Apocalypse and follows the same group of mutants. The story takes place in 1992, and audiences are quickly immersed in an X-Men mission in space. Now, I know what you’re thinking, “Didn’t the Avengers do this already? And weren’t…

  • ‘Monsoon’ Review: Hazy Memories of Home

    ‘Monsoon’ Review: Hazy Memories of Home

    A moving tale, Monsoon follows Kit (Henry Golding) as he returns home to Saigon, Vietnam. After his family fled to England after the Vietnam war when he was six, Kit hasn’t looked back. However, after the loss of both of his parents, Kit heads back to Saigon thirty years later not only to scatter their ashes, but…