movie review
Movie reviews on workplace, corporate, and business driven films.
I’m the One Who Never Falls Apart—Until I Did
By Nadeem Shah They always say I’m the strong one. The dependable one. The listener. The problem-solver. The one who doesn’t cry, who doesn’t break, who always has a calm answer and a reassuring smile. My friends, family, coworkers — they leaned on me like I was some unshakable monument.
By Nadeem Shah 6 months ago in Journal
Rising from the Ashes: My Journey Beyond Failure
By Nadeem Shah For most of my life, I measured success by the milestones I hit—the job titles I earned, the house I lived in, the lifestyle I portrayed. I believed that if I just worked harder, pushed myself more, and never showed weakness, I could create a life that others would admire. But sometimes, life has a way of shaking the foundation beneath you, and it did just that when everything I built began to crumble.
By Nadeem Shah 6 months ago in Journal
Judy Hopps and Nick Wilde land themselves in buddy cop therapy in Zootopia 2 trailer
The only hope the pair have to continue working together is if they're able to successfully track down a mysterious snake named Gary (Ke Huy Quan). However, the serpent proves to be much more slippery than they’d initially thought.
By Omasanjuwa Ogharandukun6 months ago in Journal
Paul Haggis News: The Filmmaker Who Writes in Storm. Content Warning. AI-Generated.
When a filmmaker writes with the urgency of thunder and the intimacy of rainfall, you get Paul Haggis. There’s a reason the name Paul Haggis still rises in conversations about truth, conflict, and cinema that doesn’t flinch. While much of Hollywood recycles the safe and expected, Haggis has always chosen discomfort. He doesn't just write characters — he writes collisions. And even now, years after the spotlight softened, he's quietly reclaiming that narrative in the way only a storyteller of his depth could.
By Paul Haggis News6 months ago in Journal
Parasite” – The Movie That Spoke the Truth We Were All Too Afraid to Say Out Loud
It begins in the shadows. In a half-submerged basement, damp with the scent of mold and ramen steam, a boy holds his phone up to the ceiling trying to steal Wi-Fi. The light flickers like hope does in the hearts of people like him—people who survive not because the world allows them to, but because they find a way to smile when the world turns its back. His name is Ki-woo, and his family, the Kims, are neither lazy nor criminals—they are clever, like all the poor are forced to be. They fold pizza boxes for pennies, chase drunk men for jobs, and laugh in the dark to keep from crying.
By Shakespeare Jr6 months ago in Journal











