Movie rating scale:
★★★★★ absolute cinema
★★★★ and above = Brilliant
★★★½ Very Good
★★★ Good
★★½ Decent
★★ and below = bad
Fourteen years. That’s how long it took me to finish this show. And let me tell you, it was worth every single second. Watching Adventure Time as a kid, it was all about the silly jokes, fun characters, and wacky adventures. But coming back to it as a 20-year-old? Oh boy, it hit different.
This show grew up with me. It started as this colorful, goofy escape and slowly became something so layered, emotional, and meaningful. Finn, Jake, Marceline, PB,…
"Mulholland Drive" isn’t just a movie; it’s a brain-bending, dream-spun labyrinth David Lynch invites us to stumble through, piece by piece. Every scene feels like a fever dream that's one frame away from unraveling into something completely new. It’s as if you’re watching a mystery you’re supposed to be solving, but Lynch threw out half the clues, turned off the lights, and handed you a broken flashlight.
In this surreal journey, the first half plays out as Betty’s dream—a Hollywood…
this movie hits hard. By the end, I felt soulless hearing her sentence, then seeing the real Tonya in the credits. She worked so hard and devoted her life to skating, just for her piece of shit husband to ruin everything. What a sad depressing life. Seriously, fuck her husband.
"Portrait of a Lady on Fire" is pure art. From the start, the tension pulls you in, and those slow-paced scenes just work perfectly. They're beautiful, each one a masterpiece on its own.
I love how we see Héloïse become happier as the movie goes on. But then, of course, a man has to come in and ruin everything. The "look back" moment is so powerful, tying in with the myth and adding even more depth. And that painting of…