Tag: Movies
-
Cut from Bridgerton’s Cloth, But with Its Own Distinct Thread: Mr. Malcolm’s List

One particular genre I typically stay away from is romance—though even I can sometimes get pulled into a film or two. I admit Bridgerton was one I found quite delightful. For me, it was not the romanticizing of petticoats and social climbing that held my attention, but the unfolding drama—much of it delivered through the…
-
Where Design Tells the Story: The Enduring, Visual Horror of Silent Hill

Some films seem to elude my gaze. I am never quite certain whether it is the faint illusion that I have seen them before, when in fact I have not, or whether, at the time, they simply did not appeal. Yet some works return to the forefront. This particular film has lingered in my thoughts,…
-
Coming Home to Miyagi-Do: Karate Kid: Legends Reconnects a Franchise

Every industry has its markers—eras that define not only innovation but impact. For cinema, the 1980s stand as the age of the blockbuster: a decade marked by creative risk, audience trust, and films whose resonance has endured for generations. As one devoted fan of the period aptly notes, there was something singular about those films:…
-
Challenging Expectations: How Predator: Badlands Reframes the Predator Mythos

Solid setup. Predator: Badlands hits the structural beats where it needs to. Sometimes, first watches can be misleading and lend themselves to prescriptive bias, and such was the case with my initial viewing of Predator: Badlands. A second watch—with one singular element adjusted—redirected my perspective and opened my eyes to why a second or even…
-
Balancing Comedy and Cultural Respect: The Flaws of Perry’s Recent Film

At times, certain projects become liabilities within a creative’s broader portfolio. Though conceived with intention, they lack the narrative cohesion or thematic rigor necessary to command meaningful commendation. Such is the case with “Joe’s College Road Trip,” the 2026 feature from Tyler Perry. Defining Legacy With each production, Perry continues to shape a legacy—an evolving…
-
Rosario: A Case Where Curiosity Conjured a Catastrophe

With some films, everything is predictable. The films seem to be written to be predictable, so much so that they lack any resonance or materialism. This seems to be the case with the 2025 horror film “Rosario.” ” A film with a pulse but not a heartbeat. A Premonitory Meeting This is the story of…
-
The Art of Withholding: A Closer Look at Bugonia’s Subtle Emotional Resolution

Some films beckon critics by virtue of their positioning within awards season. Their acclaim alone becomes an invitation—an analyst’s cue to assess not only the individual work but also the broader temperature of the industry: what resonates, what falters, and what signals evolving tastes. That impulse informed my decision to engage with the 2025 feature…
-
When the Device Runs Away: How ‘Couple Goals’ Loses Its Narrative

Among cineastes, there is a longstanding debate about the fundamental purpose of film. Most ultimately agree that cinema exists to tell stories—stories rendered through a visual medium. While storytelling may be the essence of filmmaking, not all films succeed at it. When evaluating a film’s effectiveness, the primary metric is always the quality of its…
-
Ruth and Boaz on Netflix: Beautiful Intentions, Lackluster Execution

February is widely recognized as a month dedicated to celebrating Black excellence and love—an observance often marked by cultural features that bring both into sharp focus. “Ruth and Boaz (2026),” produced by Tyler Perry and Devon Franklin, positions itself squarely within that tradition. Drawing inspiration from the biblical story of Ruth, the film offers a…
-
Unapologetically Dark: Ryan Murphy’s The Beauty Pushes Boundaries of Horror

FX’s horror drama The Beauty bears all the hallmarks of Ryan Murphy’s evolving artistic identity—one that continues to push beyond conventional boundaries and lean unapologetically into narratives that flirt with excess, discomfort, and psychological extremity. Whether The Beauty represents a departure or a distillation of Murphy’s sensibilities is open to debate. What is clear is…