Movie
"Fast 10": Full Throttle Action, But Lags in Plot Depth – A Review
Welcome, Fast & Furious fans! Here is my short critique of the latest installment of "Fast X". Amazing feats and quick action, as would be anticipated from the series. The storyline, however, felt strained, weakening emotional arcs. With so many characters, some didn't get enough time on screen. still provides people with a thrilling journey full of memories. I'm hoping that Fast 11 prioritizes quality over quantity.
By Michael Reynoso3 years ago in Critique
Megan is Missing
Megan Is Missing is rarely talked about, but most can agree it is a traumatizing film. The film focuses on two best friends, who get kidnapped, the thing that is most fucked up is when they show the scene were Megan is rotting in a barrel. The director wanted to show an ugly and disgusting side of victims who are kidnapped and don’t have a happy ending, I mean, do you ever see the dead bodies of those people you hear about on the news?
By Diani Alvarenga3 years ago in Critique
Critique and relevance
An eye opening intense film exposing the dark side of substance abuse. yearning for love and acceptance, with eyes wide shut. This film cracks open the reality of abuse prescribed or illicit. Unfolding the destruction of family and love. A scary reality. Cringy extreme deep dive into a cloudy morality.
By Sarah urffer3 years ago in Critique
Crazy, Stupid, Love
Cal Weaver is a middle-aged man whose wife Emily asks for a divorce after she reveals an affair she had with co-worker David Lindhagen. After moving into his own apartment, Cal begins frequenting an upscale bar, talking loudly about his divorce, until he attracts the attention of a young man named Jacob Palmer.
By Judith Akabs3 years ago in Critique
Pretty Woman
Edward Lewis, a powerful corporate raider hailing from New York, acquires and dismantles struggling companies, selling their assets for profit. He invites his girlfriend, Jessica, to join him on a business trip, but she grows weary of being at his constant beck and call and decides to end their relationship. One night, while leaving a business party in the Hollywood Hills, Edward takes his lawyer's Lotus Esprit sports car and unintentionally finds himself in the city's red-light district on Hollywood Boulevard. It is here where he meets Vivian Ward, a prostitute. Struggling to operate the manual transmission car, Edward pays Vivian to drive him to the Regent Beverly Wilshire Hotel. Impulsively, Edward hires Vivian for the night and, despite initial awkwardness, finds her charming and ultimately has sex with her.
By Judith Akabs3 years ago in Critique
The Shape Of Water
Elisa Esposito, who was found abandoned by the side of a river as an infant with scars on her neck, is mute and communicates through sign language. In 1962, during the Cold War, Elisa works as a custodian at a secret government laboratory in Baltimore, Maryland, and lives a very routine life in an apartment above a movie theater. Her only friends are her closeted gay next-door neighbor Giles, a struggling middle-aged advertising illustrator, and her co-worker Zelda Fuller.
By Judith Akabs3 years ago in Critique
Disney-?
Since Disney+’s launch and the capitalistic acquisition of media outlets, Disney has sacrificed quality for quantity. Sure, Disney had past sloppy VHS/DVD-only releases, but their theatrical productions were still enjoyable. The most grievous examples are the Star Wars franchise (vii-ix trilogy with its director debacle) and the chaotic MCU Phase-5.
By Christopher Michael3 years ago in Critique
Critique - Oppenheimer. Top Story - August 2023.
Roughly 50% of the frames were close-ups of Cillian Murphy's face either thinking hard about quantum, noticeably aging or rocking an amazing hat. Watch Barbie instead - it's an extravaganza of pink vomit with its own problems, but at least your bladder won't burst two-thirds of the way through it.
By L.C. Schäfer3 years ago in Critique








