movie
Best geek movies throughout history.
The Trailer Is Finally Here For 'The Secrets Of Dumbledore'
After over 3 years of waiting, we finally have a trailer from the next Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them film. Fantastic Beasts and Where To Find Them: The Secrets of Dumbledore is set to release in April 2022. The trailer, which was released on December 13, comes much later in the film’s progress and closer to the release date than any of the other trailers before it. MuggleNet speculates that this could be for marketing purposes since the previous film Fantastic Beasts and Where to Find Them: The Crimes of Grindelwald did not do as well as Warner Brothers would have hoped. However, it could also be due to all the secrecy that has been wrapped up in this film. Now, we are finally getting some bits of information as to what we might see in the new installment into the Wizarding World.
By Culture Slate4 years ago in Geeks
Movie Review: 'Swan Song' a Wonderful Showcase for Mahershala Ali
You’re dying, it’s an incurable disease and you can do nothing to stop it. Now, imagine you have the resources and technology has advanced to a degree that you can have yourself cloned down to the most miniscule memories and capabilities and that your clone won’t have the genetic predisposition for the same deathly illness that is killing you. This clone can take over your life and make sure that your family has no idea that you have died. Would you do it?
By Sean Patrick4 years ago in Geeks
10 Sci-fi Films to Watch if you Liked Dune . Top Story - December 2021.
In his 2021 science fiction film Dune, Denis Villeneuve welcomes audiences to his version of the planet Arrakis—an inhospitable and sparsely populated desert wasteland. Set in the distant future amidst a feudal interstellar society, Dune is the first of a planned two-part adaptation of Frank Herbert's identically coined 1965 novel.
By Wonita Gallagher-Kruger4 years ago in Geeks
V for Vendetta Analysis
This movie is undoubtedly one of those that I can watch several times. Beyond the plot, it has a mix of emotions and feelings of freedom and justice in his purest sense, in addition to the importance brought to the knowledge power to fight against the oppression and tyranny. From the psychological view is quite deep, reflexive and high minded; because it crudely shows different realities that go from the cases of pedophilia, rapes until experimentation using human beings like animals. The main character represents the Guy Fawkes's aims fighting against the England Monarchy at that time when the Gun Powder Plot took place, who becomes source of inspiration of the popular mask used by Anonymous, a group dedicated to spread secret information through the deep web and others. This character takes on a life of its own with his graceful use of the words which shows his erudition and his past as a guinea pig, something that makes him cold and merciless when it comes to doing justice; although in a certain time of the movie he shows his careful side which somehow he must give up to fulfill his mission. It deeply touches those who have been through hard times commited to performing certain tasks in this world and because of this they have lost human contact, so much so that the slightest show of affection gives them an unequaled ecstasy that many times they must leave behind.
By gabriel intriago4 years ago in Geeks
Movie Review: 'West Side Story' is Vibrant Popcorn Entertainment
The big question surrounding Steven Speilberg’s big budget adaptation of Stephen Sondheim’s legendary musical, West Side Story was why? Why remake West Side Story? What about this 60’s era paean to 1950s, post World War 2 angst carries any appeal today? What justifies remaking a movie that has a beloved original that is about as good as the material could likely be? Having seen Speilberg’s West Side Story, I still don’t have a good answer for that question. But, I can’t say I wasn’t entertained or moved by the effort on display.
By Sean Patrick4 years ago in Geeks
Movie Review: 'The Lost Daughter' is a Tough Movie
Few movies have triggered my secondhand embarrassment senses like The Lost Daughter. Maggie Gyllenhaal’s directorial debut stars Oscar winner Olivia Coleman as a college professor on holiday in Rome. Coleman’s Leda is desperately awkward and incapable of relating to other, lesser human beings. We get a sense of Leda in her first interaction with Lyle (Ed Harris), the caretaker of the apartment she has rented for her vacation. Lyle, in his 70s, is struggling while carrying her remarkably heavy bag to her room and yet he still tries to flirt with the near 50 year old Leda, much to her confusion and dismissiveness.
By Sean Patrick4 years ago in Geeks
Dash and Lily - A Netflix Series Review
I have to complete the next Christmas challenge before time is up! Airing in Netflix in 2020, Dash and Lily is a series that follows two teenagers desiring for the holidays to be different from what they usually are. Lily starts a game in a journal. Finding it, a cynical Dash play along. Exchanging the journal back and forth, Dash and Lily open up to one another about what Christmas means to them.
By Marielle Sabbag4 years ago in Geeks











