I watched War of the Worlds (2025) curious about its use of the screenlife format—that style of storytelling that unfolds entirely within sc...Read More
Watching New York, I Love You feels like walking through Manhattan catching brief flashes of affection: there’s charm, but also a stab of fr...Read More
Few films capture violence and social control as firmly as The Hunger Games. While watching it, I felt a clear duality: on the one hand, the...Read More
Until Dawn (2025), directed by David F. Sandberg, is one of those projects that sounds more promising on paper than it turns out to be on sc...Read More
Ondine (2009), directed by Neil Jordan, is a film that delicately balances emotional realism with the enchantment of Celtic mythology. Set a...Read More
There’s something both nostalgic and daring about The Fantastic Four: First Steps (2025), as if Marvel has finally realized that the Fantast...Read More
It’s not just a film about love; I Love You Forever feels like a warped mirror reflecting how far emotionally vulnerable people are willing ...Read More
I watched A Minecraft Movie (2025) with the hope of encountering something that translated the limitless creativity of the game into a cinem...Read More
Released in 2022, Smile by Parker Finn is a film that plays with the threshold between momentary fright and unsettling reflection. While it ...Read More
Fifty Shades of Grey, released in 2015 under the direction of Sam Taylor-Johnson, is a curious cinematic experiment that attempts to merge e...Read More
Watching Heads of State (2025), I was struck by how the film balances escapist spectacle with narrative emptiness. The premise — a U.S. Pres...Read More
From the very first scenes, God’s Pocket makes it clear it won’t be a conventional drama. John Slattery, better known until then as Roger St...Read More
From the very first frame, Superman (2025) makes it clear it hasn’t come to patch up the past, but to redefine a new standard, exactly as di...Read More
What makes The Brutalist such a unique cinematic experience is the way Brady Corbet, with his 70mm VistaVision camera, builds a universe whe...Read More
As I walked out of the dark theater with Manhattan’s lights flickering ahead, I felt that Celine Song had crafted Materialists into an acidi...Read More
Watching The Life of Chuck feels like reading a farewell letter written in dim light, the pages filled with layers of hope, sorrow, and a ne...Read More
From the very first notes of blues slicing through the darkness of 1932 Clarksdale, Sinners does more than revisit the vampire myth; it rein...Read More