Film enthusiast capturing reel moments in life | 🍿 Popcorn connoisseur | Exploring the magic of storytelling through cinema | 🎥
Favorite films
Recent activity
AllRecent reviews
More-
Fear Street: 1978 2021
Netflix’s Fear Street Part Two: 1978 takes us back to the heyday of slasher films, channeling the spirit of Friday the 13th while continuing the overarching mystery of the Fear Street trilogy. With a nostalgic summer camp setting, brutal kills, and a solid emotional core, this sequel builds on the first film’s momentum while carving out its own identity.
The movie centers on Camp Nightwing, where Shadyside and Sunnyvale kids clash before a masked killer turns the summer retreat into…
Translated from by -
Beetlejuice Beetlejuice 2024
Tim Burton’s Beetlejuice Beetlejuice is a visually stunning, nostalgia-fueled sequel that brings back the manic energy of Michael Keaton’s iconic ghost, but struggles to justify its own existence. While fans of the original will appreciate the return of familiar faces and Burton’s signature gothic whimsy, the film suffers from an overstuffed plot and uneven pacing.
At its best, Beetlejuice Beetlejuice captures the chaotic, darkly comedic spirit of the 1988 classic. Keaton slips back into the role effortlessly, delivering the same…
Translated from by
Popular reviews
More-
Strange Darling 2023
JT Mollner’s Strange Darling is a bold, stylish thriller that plays with time and expectations, delivering a tense game of cat and mouse that’s as engaging as it is unsettling. With standout performances from Willa Fitzgerald and Kyle Gallner, the film takes a familiar premise—a dangerous encounter between two strangers—and turns it into something far more complex.
The film’s biggest strength is its nonlinear storytelling, which keeps the audience on edge. Instead of unfolding in a straightforward manner, Strange Darling…
Translated from by -
Babylon 2022
Few films in recent memory have been as polarizing as Babylon, Damien Chazelle’s three-hour, high-energy odyssey through the hedonistic, anything-goes era of 1920s Hollywood. It’s a film that wears its excess like a badge of honor, reveling in debauchery, ambition, and the sheer madness of the movie industry’s early days. But while Babylon is undeniably bold and technically impressive, its relentless energy and sprawling narrative might not be for everyone.
From the opening scenes—a raucous, drug-fueled party that sets the…
Translated from by