“How does it feel?”
Timothée Chalamet fades into the character of a man who sought to be something more than face value. “Whatever it is they don’t want me to be.”
“Open your ears man!”
Update: my review of one of the year’s best!
“How does it feel?”
Timothée Chalamet fades into the character of a man who sought to be something more than face value. “Whatever it is they don’t want me to be.”
“Open your ears man!”
Update: my review of one of the year’s best!
The night is dark and full of terrors.
Hauntingly intoxicating and even, somehow, sexy. Eggers wants a visceral reaction from us in many ways. Orlok is a crazed freak fest on his own amongst subliminal freaks.
Death & love is coming for us all.
Update: my review via TCS.
To connect is to live, but also to suffer the consequences of unworthy connections.
What are we supposed to be searching for?
There’s so much wrong with this “Netflix film”.
Absolutely abysmal this is the final product.
Insane line readings from everyone, Brian Cox is a legend, and the runtime is disturbingly long.
Isn’t it crazy the writers and directors of this absolute slop fest made two of the defining comic book films of the last decade (that are pretty damn good)?
Utterly powerful. Emotionally breathtaking, and beautiful. Damaging to the soul.
My favorite of the year.
What is the cost of existence? Will we fight tooth and nail when something wants our very breath? Moreover, what is the truth, and the cost of memory?
Ash blends perfect elements of cyberpunk, horror, science fiction and survival films into something otherworldly and gnarly; at times a visual beast of a horror picture. The script asks the right questions and with the right amount of exposition, the final cut to black lingers.