One Punch Man
Juliantina
Reacher
The Cleaning Lady
Divaldo: O Mensageiro da Paz
Adolescence
Platform 7
Mufasa: The Lion King
Xeque Mate (a série)
Demon Slayer: Kimetsu no Yaiba
Have you seen the trailer for the upcoming Nobody 2? If you aren't one of the 16 million people that already have, here it is. Let's save our thoughts on it for now, but remember the tone, the jokes, everything you can. First I want to talk about the prequel, Nobody. Everybody loves it. I've been doing some digging, and it's genuinely hard to find people who hate it. I remember being excited about it back in 2021. The first time I saw the poster, I got the entire movie. At least, I thought so. I
CINEGRAM: It is getting a sequel now
Filmmaker and VHS fiend. The Svengoolie of Montreal.
As a child, one of my loftiest fantasies was to live out my life as some sort of boy genius (the thing, not the band) existence in a treehouse full of slap-dash inventions made out of the salvaged parts of toys alongside a fully functional Rube Goldberg machine that woke me up in the morning and made me breakfast á la Wallace and Gromit. The tragic truth is that I wasn't a genius. I was a below-average student who never learned how to ride a bike and do you know where kids like that end up? That
JennMaxwell: Realized while reading this that I've never seen a Final Destination movie in theatres before. I'm stoked
Recovering film school student | Peliplat Content Creator
You know that feeling when you step out of the theatre after a movie and the whole world feels different? Like you're somehow part of the world you've just spent the last few hours inhabiting? It’s a powerful feeling, one that can turn everyday experiences, like a commute home, into a thrilling journey. Pure main character energy. Well, that’s how I felt after watching Final Destination: Bloodlines. I had a blast watching it, and actually found myself really rooting for all the characters to sur
Depressed queer socialist... and cinephile!
There is no country with which I have more of a love-hate relationship than France. On the one hand, French was the first second language I learned, and I have wonderful memories of my visits to the country. On the other hand… French culture is weird. And if you don’t know why I’m saying that, just look at Cannes’ new rules for its red carpet, because let me tell you, it’s hypocritical at best and outright asinine at worst. So let’s talk about it. If you missed the news last week, Cannes announc
Ishika: ya but I rlly don't wanna see a dick on the carpet. Also, you know today's society will objectify the fk out of any girl who's nude. Look at Kanye's stunt with his gf, it was so weird and I felt so uncomfortable knowing she was uncomfortable. Totally here for freedom of expression with fashion, but how is going fully nude fashion? If they're banning skin tight, or like cleavage, that's a different story. Also, shouldn't the red carpet for canned reflect the fashion of the movie they're promoting?
Programmer/Organizer at Insomniac Film Festival. Character Actor Appreciator @characteractorclub. Movie enjoyer since '97
Aaand we're back! Thanks to everyone who checked out part one :) Here are my picks for the next round of guests on White Lotus. You know, that luxury resort chain with a weirdly high mortality rate: Kaitlyn Dever Kaitlyn Dever in Ticket to Paradise You know her from: Booksmart, The Last of Us, Justified, Unbelievable Critic David Sims once wrote: "I bought all the Kaitlyn Dever stock after Justified and now I’m a millionaire." Like Sims, my first exposure to Dever was her role as kidnapping vict
Just a simple cinephile who enjoys movies from all around the world.
Cannes is undoubtedly cinema's biggest party. Most of the time, it may be pretentious, but we can't deny that it's the entrance door for new voices, a runway full of snobbism and a second chance for older movies, no disrespect to the dinosaurs wandering around the red carpet. It's the definite window for film d'auteur but it's also the opportunity to gloriously pay tribute to living legends. It's an artistic and political act. It's glamour and simplicity. It's a contradiction that faithfully ref
Whiplash is the only other film that comes to mind in recent memory that is set in the same world as TÁR, but they are very different from each other. The sensational and accessible qualities are completely stripped away from TÁR, turning it into an esoteric piece of cinema. But one thing that is consistent in both is the unrelenting obsession of an artist. Lydia Tár, played magnificently by Cate Blanchett, is a tour de force. The world of TÁR revolves around Lydia, and so does the story. What i
I had never completely understood the general concept of Tim Miller's series. Love, death and robots? What's that? A simple combination of random words connected by the mere desire to lure the audience? It was as if, despite falling more and more in love with this series as time went by, something was always missing for me, feeling like someone should have approached me to tell me "this is it dude, what else do you want?" After four glorious seasons, I understood everything. The picture is more
CINEGRAM: It is getting a sequel now