A Father, a Son, and a Galaxy of Trouble: Why The Mandalorian & Grogu Earns Its Place on the Big Screen
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A Father, a Son, and a Galaxy of Trouble: Why The Mandalorian & Grogu Earns Its Place on the Big Screen
A Flawless Victory: ‘Mortal Kombat II’ Delivers the Tournament Fans Demanded
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Testament: The Story of Moses — A Docudrama of Mainstream Scholarship
Rooster: a comedy about life, that surprisingly good at talking about life, by the guy who was in the 40-year-old virgin 
Beyond the Buddy-Cop: Zootopia 2 Is a Subversive Masterpiece Hiding in Plain Sight
2 decades later, The Devil Wears Prada 2 proves that the devil’s still got style
Gird your loins, because Miranda Priestly is back—and she hasn’t lost an ounce of her terrifying, intoxicating power. Twenty years after The Devil Wears Prada became an unlikely cultural cornerstone, this long-awaited sequel pulls off something genuinely rare in the age of the legacy reboot: it arrives not as a cynical cash grab but as a thoughtful, surprisingly vital evolution that respects its…
A Cosmic Triumph: The Super Mario Galaxy Movie Just Saved the Summer
Somehow, Nintendo and Illumination have pulled off the impossible again. After “The Super Mario Bros. Movie” smashed every box office record known to humankind, the pressure for a sequel was astronomical. So what did they do? They aimed straight for the stars and delivered a film that is not just a worthy follow-up, but a genuinely breathtaking animated epic that stands entirely on its own. The…
Maul:Shadow Lord -- A story where light and dark not only battle, but meet
Star Wars animation has been on a real hot streak lately, and “Maul: Shadow Lord” might just be its crown jewel. The critics are going absolutely wild for this one, and honestly, for good reason. A perfect 100% score on Rotten Tomatoes isn’t something you see every day, but this show earns every single point with a dark, stylish, and surprisingly deep character study. Right from the jump, the…
Waxing On: The Karate Kid and Me – A Review (from a guy who was already in the bag)
Look, I went into Ralph Macchio’s Waxing On already a fan. Grew up on Karate Kid, even practiced a sibling style to Goju-ryu, so this book was always gonna tickle my fancy. But what I didn’t expect was how much it would remind me of the Mark Hamill conundrum. You know the one: you play a role so iconic that for a while, that’s all anyone sees. Daniel-san, Luke Skywalker—same trap. Macchio gets…
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Crime 101’ Won’t Reinvent the Heist Movie — But It Might Just Wake Up Amazon’s Theatrical Ambitions
Project Hail Mary Isn't Perfect. It's Better Than That.
Project Hail Mary: A Review from Someone Who Actually Thinks About Things
What the Book Is On its surface: humanity faces an alien threat—microbial life (astrophage) that’s draining the sun, they can’t talk to it, can’t reason with it, don’t understand it. Solution: send a guy to another star system to figure it out. Layer two: petty politics, power consolidation, the ugly machinery of survival. Stratt and her team making brutal calls because someone has to. The…
A Review of the 'The Blue Zones':A look at some of the world's longest living populations. A good read, but with a caveat.
I really enjoyed The Blue Zones. It is an engaging, well-written summary of research on the handful of places around the world where people consistently live longer, healthier lives. Dan Buettner does an excellent job of distilling complex demographic data into a readable narrative, and I think he raises some genuinely important considerations that are worth taking seriously. The core…
Refind Self: The Personality Test Game – A Review
So I bought this game because I wanted to see what a game that tries to measure your personality even looks like. I’ve taken all the usual tests—Enneagram, Myers-Briggs, Big Five. But I’ve never seen a video game attempt anything like that before. I wanted to know if it was even possible. Whether it would be accurate wasn’t really the point for me. I just wanted an idea of what this could end up…
Carl’s Doomsday Scenario – The Dungeon Is Watching
In the first book of Dungeon Crawler Carl, we meet a world on fire and a system built on spectacle—a deadly, dystopian reality show masquerading as a game. But it’s in Book 2, Carl’s Doomsday Scenario, that the mask starts to slip. What first felt like a novel set of mechanics becomes something more sinister, more expansive—and, ultimately, more resonant. What struck me most was the scale. The…
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“Starved and Chainsawed”: A Review of Chainsaw Man Season 1
There’s a rhythm to survival in Chainsaw Man—one that oscillates between chainsaw shrieks and silence, between manic violence and the hollowness that follows. Watching Season 1 feels like being throttled forward by the centrifugal force of its action, only to be dropped into a quiet question: What are we really fighting for? That duality—exhilaration laced with unease—isn’t a byproduct. It’s the…
Kim Possible (2003): A Beeper, a Burrito, and a Time Capsule That Still Works
There’s a specific kind of nostalgia that sneaks up on you — not the big, sweeping “I remember this!” kind, but the subtle muscle-memory version. The tone of a show’s opening credits. The click of a Kimmunicator. The way the world-ending mission always cut back to something totally mundane, like getting to cheer practice or worrying about a math test. Rewatching Kim Possible recently, I didn’t…