Movie
The Exorcist
Youngster Linda Blair effectively portrays tortured Irish Catholic preadolescent Reagan MacNeill in the movie “The Exorcist”. Diabolically set, close to the America’s governing heartbeat the domestic sacramental war pitting priests against evil forces rocks both furniture and mind as possession crosses the line, leaving the audience wanting guilty pleasure forgiveness.
By Marc OBrien2 years ago in Critique
Mean Girls
In this 2004 comedy film we are introduced to Cady a first time high school student and quickly befriends Janis who convinces to her to infitrate the Plastics. While doing so Cady meets Regina the leader, Gretchen who longs to be fully accepted and Karen who is the nicest but also naive. Along the way Cady learns that thanks to constant backstabbing and Janis' manipulation, school popularity is not as crack up as it is. Regina also learns this but this the hard way as she realizes she is no longer the queen bee. By the end Cady did not like who she turned into and made amends with everyone and they all become friends. Over the years this film had attracted fans and served as inspriration.
By Forest Green3 years ago in Critique
Skinamarink
Would you like to see two hours of ankles, door frames, and ceilings? If you answered yes, Skinamarink is the movie for you. Never in my life have I watched such an awful movie, and I’ve seen Christmas Vacation 2, so that’s really saying something. This horror movie is horrible.
By Kevin McMechan3 years ago in Critique
The Incredibles
In the 1940s Bob Incredible was living life as a superhero in his city until a mishap changed his life and pretty much his prespective. This animated film shows this how a family bonds through being superheroes and overcoming their problems to defeat an unknown threat. And through his training Bob becames who is he again.
By Forest Green3 years ago in Critique
Jaws
June 1975. Millions of moviegoers flooded theaters. They clung to their seats, startled as a big Godzilla-style shark incited bigger fear. A young Steven Spielberg directed part monster thriller, part deadly chase. It does for ocean water what Hitchcock’s “Psycho” did for showers.
By Lynn Fenske3 years ago in Critique
Aftersun (dir. Charlotte Wells)
Memories, misunderstood as crystallised time capsules trellising our pasts are anything but. Real and imagined crudely stitched. Some tactile; others soft as ghosts, likely to morph upon discovery. Both evocative, neither enough to paint someone’s lingering silhouette whole.
By Mesh Toraskar3 years ago in Critique
Victim/Suspect
This Netflix documentary is a must-watch, highlighting sexual assault cases nationwide that turned young victims into suspects. Led by the diligent efforts of journalist Rae de Leon, a modern-day hero, more than 200 cases were reinvestigated, which revealed incomplete reports, shaming, and systemic abuse of power by law enforcement officials.
By Marilyn Glover3 years ago in Critique









