Arts + Entertainment
The central nexus for all things film, gaming, art, and music.
Light to the Flame.... Letters to Him
She sees him in her dreams, his touch haunts her soul. She can feel the remnants of his soul when they are apart. No one is supposed to make her feel this way, she didn't give him permission. He hides his emotions through fears, and she hides emotions in her notebook. His stares frighten her, it's as if she can see the window to his soul, it is almost if it was destined, if there is such a thing. No matter how far they try to run, their souls are like magnets, pulling the two to connect. Could it be, if they both drop their fears, and love themselves unconditionally, that's only when their flames can become one? For she is him, and he is her, their hearts beat in sync, longing to return to its rightful owner. When one is lost the other is lost too, their hurt, and pain reflect each other, but one is too blind to see this.
By Kimberly "NaturallyImperfected" Gordon8 years ago in Poets
Transformers Revenge of the Fallen Review
It’s time to review the easily most polarizing movie in the Transformers saga. Revenge of the Fallen came out in 2009. I remember being very hype to see it, and it didn’t let me down. In fact, to let the cat out the bag, this is my favorite one of Michael Bay’s renditions.
By Matthew Sullivan8 years ago in Geeks
Movie Review Masters of the Universe 30 Years Later
The legendary John Waters once defined camp, on an episode of The Simpsons, as “The tragically ludicrous, the ludicrously tragic.” The 1987 movie Masters of the Universe pre-dates that definition of camp by more than a decade but nevertheless defines it perfectly. Masters of the Universe is a tragically ludicrous idea undermined by greed, hubris and the outright silly notion that just because something catches on with child audiences it can be translated to film in anything other than a pathetic attempt at pandering.
By Sean Patrick8 years ago in Geeks





























