Blake Patterson

Blake Patterson Patron

Favorite films

  • Blue Velvet
  • Twin Peaks: Fire Walk with Me
  • Eraserhead
  • Mulholland Drive

Recent activity

All
  • Black Bag

    ★★★

  • Women in Love

    ★★★★★

  • The Crowd

    ★★★★★

  • Mickey 17

    ★★½

Pinned reviews

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  • The Holdovers

    The Holdovers

    ★★★★★

    This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.

  • Citizen Kane

    Citizen Kane

    ★★★★★

                   The Passion of Screenwriting. 
                     Written by Blake Patterson. 

                     Chapter One: Introduction

        “If it can be written, or thought, it can be filmed,” stated by director Stanley Kubrick. At the beginning of cinema, screenwriters could only project ideas through movement. The lack of sound at the time was a barrier to be deal with. Once sound…

Recent reviews

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  • Black Bag

    Black Bag

    ★★★

    This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.

  • Women in Love

    Women in Love

    ★★★★★

    On this week’s episode, I discuss Ken Russell’s Women in Love

    Reel Values: Women in Love. (SPOILERS)

Popular reviews

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  • Triangle of Sadness

    Triangle of Sadness

    ½

    Next Best Picture says Ruben Östlund’s Triangle of Sadness is “a brilliantly scathing takedown of the wealthy and beautiful.” And The Square was “a brilliantly scathing takedown of” the Left’s hypocrisies. Facetiousness aside, Östlund is, quite possibly, the worst arthouse filmmaker and satirist working today. Östlund is the anti-Buñuel because he replaces subtlety and complexity with broadness and superficiality. While the aim is satirical, Östlund’s execution is unfunny and aggressively dull in how he exaggerates his contempt for the elite’s…

  • I Saw the TV Glow

    I Saw the TV Glow

    ★★

    Unsatisfied Surrealism.
    I Saw the TV Glow.
    Directed by Jane Schoenbrun.

       The image that will likely define Jane Schoenbrun's I Saw the TV Glow is the motif of an ice cream truck with a mix of pink and purple smoke coming from it. The motif is a metaphor for the idealism of nostalgia and the negative aftermath later, as the main character Owen (Ian Foreman as the younger version of Owen and Justice Smith as the older version of…