Vincent

Vincent

Favorite films

  • Moonlight
  • Skyfall
  • The Tree of Life
  • Vertigo

Recent activity

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  • Rio

  • Vicky Cristina Barcelona

    ★★★

  • Mission: Impossible – Dead Reckoning

    ★★½

  • Parthenope

    ★★

Recent reviews

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  • Y Tu Mamá También

    Y Tu Mamá También

    ★★★★½

    Y Tu Mamá También is a deeply intimate film, just as much about the hope and loss of its three main characters as it is about the beautiful, complicated landscape that surrounds them. A classic coming-of-age story, it lingers in that rare, in-between space of a summer road trip—where everything feels endless until it inevitably ends. It’s a raw look at the youthful craving for sensuality, the fear of real intimacy, and the way both can shape us into adulthood.

  • The Last Showgirl

    The Last Showgirl

    ★★

    I was really rooting for this film—for Pamela Anderson and for a compelling portrait of a worker on the Vegas Strip.

    Unfortunately, poor directing left the characters feeling disconnected, as if each existed in their own separate reality. Not even Jamie Lee Curtis’s talent could save the film from this lack of cohesion.

    Kiernan Shipka’s portrayal of Hannah was the film’s strongest aspect, grounding Pamela Anderson’s character, Shelly, and helping viewers realize that much of what we see is Shelly’s…

Popular reviews

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  • Incomplete

    Incomplete

    ★★★★★

    Incomplete is a gem of a short film that really hits home. It centers around the human experience of longing that all of us know well. What sets this film apart is its unique usage of dance as a visual metaphor for the protagonist’s yearning, allowing the audience to viscerally feel the ache. Major props to Korbut on his directorial debut.

  • The Brutalist

    The Brutalist

    ★★★★★

    The Brutalist is one of those rare films that makes you truly grateful for the existence of cinema. Nearly flawless in its execution—cinematography, score, acting, directing—you name it. It’s a brilliant exploration of the brutal realities of the immigrant experience in the United States, the amorphous concept of the American Dream, and the ever-present backdrop of class inequality that undermines it all. The film, and Adrien Brody in particular, deserve every accolade that’s undoubtedly heading their way.

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