Movie
Critique Challenge: 'Titanic'
Titanic is wildly melodramatic. It appeals to the lowest common denominator of emotional manipulation. The film uses a real life tragedy to frame a tacky romantic plot that only works because of two remarkable actors. The direction is assured but it demonstrates, almost accidentally, the dilettante qualities of its creator
By Sean Patrick3 years ago in Critique
Critique: 'Casablanca
Casablanca is one man’s journey from being bitter and selfish to loving and selfless. It’s about acknowledging that there are things in the world that matter more than your desires. It’s elegant in its simplicity and made colorful by its characters who color the margins of this simple story.
By Sean Patrick3 years ago in Critique
Critique: 'Citizen Kane'
Confidence… Con-Man… Confidence Man. With the right amount of confidence a man can win the world. Break that confidence, and you can ruin that same man just as easily. This, for me, is the essence of Orson Welles’ masterpiece Citizen Kane. Kane was a con-man who ended up conning himself.
By Sean Patrick3 years ago in Critique
Her (2013)
A deep exploration into the nature of consciousness, relationships and love; both Human and AI. Profound existential, ethical and philosophical questions raised, lighting the mind on fire as the movie gently plays in the background of your experience.
By Kayleigh Fraser ✨3 years ago in Critique
Disneys Musical Into The Woods
A cast of big BIG Hollywood names fill the roles for Disney’s Into The Woods musical film, which sings to us a tale of many fairytales when they are mixed together and collide. This musical piece will make you laugh, cry, yearn and connect with characters as their stories intersect.
By Hope Martin3 years ago in Critique
The Warriors
Without question the best, nearly perfect video games I've ever played. For a game that was released before individual fingers were rendered, this is game is nearly perfect. A great way to expand on and honor the original source material. My only critique, this game should've way been more open-world.
By Dyllon Rodillon3 years ago in Critique







