• Lady Bird Review: The Semi-Autobiography Of The Life of Greta Gerwig

    Lady Bird Review: The Semi-Autobiography Of The Life of Greta Gerwig

    An outspoken teen must navigate a loving but turbulent relationship with her strong-willed mother over the course of an eventful and poignant senior year of high school. Read more

  • Phantom Thread (Guest Review Featuring Nick Kush)

    Phantom Thread (Guest Review Featuring Nick Kush)

    Set in the glamour of 1950’s post-war London, renowned dressmaker Reynolds Woodcock (Daniel Day-Lewis) and his sister Cyril (Lesley Manville) are at the center of British fashion, dressing royalty, movie stars, heiresses, socialites, debutants and dames with the distinct style of The House of Woodcock. Women come and go through Woodcock’s life, providing the confirmed… Read more

  • Call Me By Your Name (Guest Review Ft. KeithLovesMovies)

    Call Me By Your Name (Guest Review Ft. KeithLovesMovies)

    It’s the summer of 1983, and precocious 17-year-old Elio Perlman is spending the days with his family at their 17th-century villa in Lombardy, Italy. He soon meets Oliver, a handsome doctoral student who’s working as an intern for Elio’s father. Amid the sun-drenched splendor of their surroundings, Elio and Oliver discover the heady beauty of… Read more

  • The Shape of Water (Guest Review ft. Amari Sali)

    The Shape of Water (Guest Review ft. Amari Sali)

    Last year, Amari Sali from Wherever I Look reviewed an Oscar-nominated film Fences, this time he is back to review another academy award nominated film The Shape of Water. The Shape of Water will remind you of the days when fantasy films weren’t made to set up trilogies but simply tell a stand alone, gorgeous story. Read more

  • How Far Should Conservatives Support Of Cinema Go?

    How Far Should Conservatives Support Of Cinema Go?

    To say that Hollywood has burned its bridge with Middle America is a damn understatement. Hollywood celebrities do not shy away from virtuing their contempt for people who don’t share their political views. Some have made it a secondary career to show how much they detest conservative values. So when you have a film like… Read more

  • Den of Thieves Review: A Redbox Friday Night Flick

    Den of Thieves Review: A Redbox Friday Night Flick

    Watching the trailer for Den of Thieves, this film was only going one of two ways. A throwback to past era action/heist movies or a complete disaster starring 50 Cent. Gerald Bulter, 50 Cent, Ice Cube’s son…not the lineup you are expecting from a smash hit. Read more

  • Molly’s Game Review: Jessica Chastain In Pumps Can’t Carry This Movie

    Molly’s Game Review: Jessica Chastain In Pumps Can’t Carry This Movie

    Four years ago, Utah’s wide receiver Kaelin Clay scored a 79-yard touchdown pass in a game against #4 Oregon…until he discovered that he dropped the ball at the 2-yard line and Oregon picked it up for a 99-yard touchdown the other way. What does this have to do with Molly’s Game? Nothing outside of the… Read more

  • The Post Review: A Lesson To Keep Government in Check

    The Post Review: A Lesson To Keep Government in Check

    Hollywood invested a lot of time, programming, and money into making sure he didn’t win and when that didn’t happen, people kinda lost their shit. Steven Spielberg put the production of this movie on the fly because he saw “scary parallels” between The Pentagon Papers and today’s White House. The narrative of this movie is… Read more

  • Proud Mary Review: A Very Weak B Movie

    Proud Mary Review: A Very Weak B Movie

    I feel like this film should have been released months ago but instead, Proud Mary got its official release into Hollywood’s graveyard…January. Proud Mary is a film that opens like a 1970s Blaxploitation film, but it isn’t. Taraji P. Henson stars as Mary, a hitwoman working for a Boston crime family. When she discovers that… Read more

  • The Commuter Review: Complete Schlock

    The Commuter Review: Complete Schlock

    If The Commuter didn’t go face first into schlock in the 3rd act, including Liam Neeson being reunited with his family who only seem mildly concerned that three guys were sent to their house to kill them and that Michael barely survived a massive train derailment…I could have given it two stars…but I didn’t. The… Read more

  • Bright Review: Fun But Inconsistent Film

    Bright Review: Fun But Inconsistent Film

    I had all the reasons to skip this film but then I saw the Rotten Tomatoes score…a score that critics gave 28% and the audience gave it 87%. This sparked my interest and I realized I had to watch this to see who was in the wrong here. Given it’s been 3 weeks after Star… Read more

  • I, Tonya Review: A Pop Culture Villain Turned Anti-Hero

    I, Tonya Review: A Pop Culture Villain Turned Anti-Hero

    Screenwriter Steven Rogers tells a story about Harding that has rarely been told, and we end up sympathizing with her for the first time telling this story. When the Detroit attack happened, Harding was painted as the villain as Kerrigan was portrayed as the poor innocent girl who viciously attacked. While the attack was indeed… Read more

  • The Liquidator Review

    The Liquidator Review

    It has been a while since I’ve reviewed a movie from China, the trailer for The Liquidator was enough to get me off my ass and check it out during this holiday dead zone for film. The Liquidator is a story about a criminal psychologist (Deng Chao) and a forensic fingerprint expert(Cecilia Liu) who work… Read more

  • The Ex-File 3: The Return of The Exes Review

    The Ex-File 3: The Return of The Exes Review

    December 27, 2006…the film was Black Christmas…it was the last time I let a film beat me and I walked out of the movie before the ending. 4,021 days since I’ve walked out and today…the streak is over. Read more

  • Society Reviews Top 10 Best Movies Of 2017

    Society Reviews Top 10 Best Movies Of 2017

    Now that I have dug through all the trash, it’s time for the best films of 2017. I’ll be honest, I didn’t feel like I ‘loved’ as many films in 2017 as compared to 2016 but that doesn’t mean there wasn’t good to great films in the year. I’m pretty positive that there will be… Read more

  • Society Reviews Top 10 Worst Films of 2017

    Society Reviews Top 10 Worst Films of 2017

    It’s that time of the year again, for me to take out 12 months of frustration on the worst pieces of trash that took a minimum of 20 hours out of my life. Now I have to note that there were a lot of bad movies in 2017 but only a select handful of them… Read more

  • Columbus (2017) Review: A Visual Love Letter To Ohio

    Columbus (2017) Review: A Visual Love Letter To Ohio

    I don’t always get to watch stylish artsy crap, but I can safely say that Columbus is one the most authentic visual love letters to a city (Columbus, Indiana) I’ve seen in some time and earns a spot as one of my top films of the years. Read more

  • Darkest Hour Review: Gary Oldman’s Career-Defining Moment

    Darkest Hour Review: Gary Oldman’s Career-Defining Moment

    Gary Oldman’s interpretation of Winston Churchill is one of the best historical captures we have seen in years. Along with the great Cinematography by Bruno Delbonnel who captures the tensions of war and debate visually with dramatic panning/perspective shots, Darkest Hour is Oldman’s career-defining moment as well as a great story of leadership in the… Read more