52 years after its release, Michelangelo Antonioni’s Blow-Up has a thing or two to teach the world still.
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52 years after its release, Michelangelo Antonioni’s Blow-Up has a thing or two to teach the world still.
This movie flopped not because it questioned Steve Jobs’ character, but because it questioned way more than that.
When you’ve seen this Crash, it’s impossible to mistake it for the other movie of the same name.
Finally had a revenge both with a movie that scared me into sleeping with the lights on, many years ago.
I was ready to hate on that movie hard, but it was spirited horror like I haven’t seen in some time in mainstream cinema.
I liked Deadpool, but wasn’t sure it had anything left to offer. Boy, was I ever wrong about that.
A goofy monster movie at best. An ill-fated attempt at branding a new horror franchise at worse. Nightbreed is somewhere it between and it’s pretty entertaining for reasons that are both good and bad.
Everybody knows this movie isn’t good. I wanted to explain to you why, but I ran out of space to name all the reasons.
I had to make sure L.A Story was a real movie and I hadn’t just dreamt it, so I watched it again.
If you seen this movie and wonder why it affected you so deeply, I have answers for you.
Where I conclude my Indiana Jones retrospective and draw conclusions as to why it’s never been anyone’s favorite franchise.
The first thing you need to know about this adaptation is that The Joker isn’t even mentioned until halfway.
Indiana Jones punches Nazis in the Last Crusade, but is he punching the ideology or people with a funny German accent?
Everybody likes Indiana Jones, but LOVE Star Wars. Why is that franchise like the distant cousin? Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom has some answers for us.
Why is Raiders of the Lost Ark so good? I picked up a couple things in a recent viewing.
Definitely not for everyone, but it's my favorite project from director Paul von Stoetzel, so far.