Latest Stories
Most recently published stories in Geeks.
Badass Disney Girls
Calhoun Calhoun is the leading commander of an army game. She leads her troops with an iron fist and is a very serious character. She knows how to fight and track down an enemy. She is definitely one of the toughest Disney characters of all time.
By The Inversion8 years ago in Geeks
'Throne Of Glass' Book Series
I received the first book of the series for Christmas and so far, I haven't really put it down, having six books in the series so far with another to be released in the third quarter of 2018! So far I am on the third book with just over sixty pages left to go but I'm pacing myself as I have just ordered the fourth book, Queen of Shadows, but it doesn't come until next week!
By Troy Wilde8 years ago in Geeks
The Hate on Logan Paul Needs to End!
There is so much hate going around the internet. So. Much. Hate. And it's really only revolving one person. Logan Paul. It all started when he went to Japan for New Years. First, he disrespected a whole country. Then he filmed a suicide victim... And now the recent drama about how he "hasn't changed." People are only saying he hasn't changed because they WANT to hate on him! I get it, he is very easy to hate!
By Nina Marie8 years ago in Geeks
'The Killing of a Sacred Deer': A Movie Review
The Killing of a Sacred Deer is a movie about a respected and exceptional man who plays God for a living and who is incapable of facing his own flaws and has to meet uncontrollable consequences due to a wrong past choice. It is a thriller about karma, failures, consequences and the darkest aspects of man's soul.
By Fernando Gadelha8 years ago in Geeks
Anime
Death Note is a sci-fi horror show. In this show you meet a boy named Light. One day Light was at school when he saw a book drop from the sky and land in the courtyard. Curiosity took over him and he took the book home. Light then realized the book called the death note was not a joke. The death note gives you the ability to write someone's name in it and it will cause them to die. Light then decides that he would rid the world of criminals. There is one problem, though. The world's greatest detective, L, is trying to stop him. L believes that what Light is doing is wrong and he is more of a criminal himself.
By Jillian Kostrab8 years ago in Geeks
Movie Review: 'Peter Rabbit'
Peter Rabbit is the latest in a long line of kids movies based on dignified and beloved works of children’s fiction that replaces the dignity with shrill, unfunny modernity. Peter Rabbit takes Beatrix Potter’s lovely rabbit stories and wipes it’s furry feet on them with a terrible pop soundtrack and sub-Home Alone style gags so jarringly violent you begin to wonder if they belong in a kid's flick.
By Sean Patrick8 years ago in Geeks
Movie Review: 'Becks'
Becks is a wildly charming romantic drama about a woman who goes back to her hometown following a bad break up. Lena Hall stars in the film as Becks and while her story is familiar, her character is wholly original. Hall is funny, smart, sexy and original and if you can get around the familiarity of the storytelling tropes, you will really love this character and her journey.
By Sean Patrick8 years ago in Geeks
Love Letter to Jack Nicholson
The year is 1997 and the number one song is Celine Dion and I have a secret from my friends. Whilst they are swooning over Leo and his very 90s curtain haircut in Titanic, I am harbouring a crush on very different Hollywood star. Jack Nicholson. Although DiCaprio is often compared to Nicholson (by heretics), there is only one, and that one, for me, is the original Jack.
By Louise Mackin8 years ago in Geeks
Microcosm: The 'Black Panther' Movie and the Importance of Representation
Microcosm: Situation regarded as encapsulating in miniature the characteristics of something much larger. You could ask anyone I know. I am not personally a fan of action or sci-fi blockbusters. I either fall asleep or spend the time estimating the cost of each explosion or fake spaceship.
By Naike Kabore8 years ago in Geeks
How Justice League’s Gravely Misguided Interpretation and Application of 'Show, Don’t Tell' in Dialogue Distances the Audience from Its Characters
Justice League's release marked the christening of the namesake group of heroes on the big screen; the kind of cinematic event pure childhood wonder, larger-than-life fantasies, and whimsical role-play are made of. Usually. For a $300 million comic-book extravaganza—painted by many a skeptic as THE crucible of no return for WB's sprawling movie universe— whose primordial concern was supposed to be convincingly re-affirming its brand's struggling reputation to a new generation of audiences, this film sure takes viewers for granted. To better understand why, we must take a contextual look at what came before it.
By Maximilien Goudreault-Mayrand8 years ago in Geeks











