Firestarter (2022) – Review/ Summary
In this remake of Firestarter, you get what purely feels like an origin story left on a frustrating ellipsis to set up a sequel.
In this remake of Firestarter, you get what purely feels like an origin story left on a frustrating ellipsis to set up a sequel.
While it doesn’t start off great, as it ventures into the bizarre, The Man Who Fell To Earth will capture your attention.
Moonshot is your run-of-the-mill, improbable romance that is fun to watch and easy to forget.
Between depression, various “What if?” scenarios, and relationships in disrepair, it is all presented in the sometimes overwhelming Everything Everywhere All At Once.
Expired will likely be one of the most dreary films you could ever see that didn’t involve watching someone be traumatized.
What might be sold as a sci-fi action-adventure, with Ryan Reynolds™ styled comedy, is really a tear-inducing family drama.
Moonfall is a popcorn film full of dumb fun – the moon falls (and that’s not even the craziest part), things get spectacularly destroyed, and the US tries to nuke the moon (of course they do).
Kimi is a meek thriller that doesn’t fully tap into the role of listening devices or the people who troubleshoot the AI behind them.
Maika is probably one of the most entertaining sci-fi action films, aimed at kids, I have either ever seen.
When not paired with action, drama, or being an adventure, sci-fi is a tough sell, and After Yang shows why.