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My Friend Dahmer (2017) Movie Review

February 22, 2018 Steve Baqqi
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Jeffrey Dahmer was an infamous serial killer who murdered at least seventeen men between 1978 and 1991. This morbid fact isn’t a very fun review opening, sure, but this isn’t a very pleasant movie. Written and directed by Marc Meyers, the film is based on a graphic novel of the same name by famed cartoonist, John Backderf. Backderf went to high school with Dahmer, and befriended him shortly before their graduation; incidentally, right before Dahmer started killing. The filmmakers do not flinch while showing Dahmer’s fatalistic descent. His behavior escalates from picking up roadkill, to killing and mutilating animals, fantasizing about murder and necrophilia, and lastly his first murder. My Friend Dahmer seeks to humanize and understand its notorious title character, while never condoning his actions.

mage Via: Youtube.com

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Tags My Friend Dahmer, 2017, Movie Review, Jeffrey Dahmer, Serial Killer, True Crime, John Backderf, Marc Meyers, Failure, Murder, Derf, Alcoholism, Ross Lynch
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Logan (2017) Movie Review

December 16, 2017 Steve Baqqi
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After the success of Deadpool, Fox Studios suddenly got the nerve to allow the superheroes in its stable to be placed in R-rated films. Wolverine was the next logical choice. Despite some hit or miss sequels and reboots, terrible prequels, and one decent stand-alone film, the X-Men film franchise, and Wolverine, in particular, have always been bankable. Always repressing unfathomable rage, a living weapon with unbreakable razor claws protruding from his fists, Wolverine is tailor-made for a violent R-rated action romp.  James Mangold directed the last successful standalone Wolverine film, aptly titled The Wolverine, and was given the creative reins for what could be Hugh Jackman’s final portrayal. Hugh Jackman has been faithfully reprising his role as Wolverine for seventeen years now and was ready to call it quits. Fan favorite, Patrick Stewart, was also brought back to play Professor X and the film is all the better for it. The result? A somber, neo-noir western that works as a perfect sendoff for both Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, and their respective characters. Logan skillfully integrates visceral action with gut-wrenching emotionality and bleak fatalism.

Image Via: Salemnet

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Tags Logan, 2017, Movie Review, Deadpool, Ryan Reynolds, Wolverine, X-men, James Mangold, Hugh Jackman, Patrick Stewart, Professor Xavier, Fox Studios, Disney, Western, Neo Noir, Dystopian, Dysfunctional Family, Violence, Graphic Violence, Crime, Murder, Action, The Dark Knight
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Suburbicon (2017) Movie Review

November 13, 2017 Steve Baqqi
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What comes to mind when you think of the 1950s? The Cold War, Sputnik, McCarthyism, post-war prosperity? Cheerful suburban home life following white flight from America’s cities, white picket fences, housewives with towering hairdos, and friendly neighbors? Or maybe we have come to see through the facade of an all-inclusive, welcoming community; a fragile edifice pitched during a time when racism, segregation, and housing district redlining were still running rampant. Suburbicon attempts to tackle these romantic anachronisms of the mid-20th century to reveal the violent torrent of racism and paranoia that lurked underneath, threatening to explode into chaos and social upheaval. Unfortunately, the movie is a god-awful mess that fails to provide any of these topics proper examination.

Image Via: Freakingeek.

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Tags Suburbicon, 2017, Cold War, Sputnik, Racism, Segregation, Paranoia, Crime, Murder, Thriller, Bad Movie, Gardner Lodge, Matt Damon, George Clooney, Coen Brothers, Julianne Moore, Movie Review, Oscar Isaac
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Wind River (2017) Movie Review

November 6, 2017 Steve Baqqi
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Taylor Sheridan is on a roll. Fresh from writing back-to-back stellar films, Sicario and Hell or High Water, Sheridan gives us another gem with Wind River. Jeremy Renner and Elizabeth Olsen respectively star in Wind River as a U.S. Fish and Wildlife tracker and an FBI agent. They are tasked with tracking a murderer in this meditative thriller set on the frozen landscape of Wyoming.

Image Via: Youtube. 

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Tags Wind River, 2017, Movie Review, Taylor Sheridan, Native American, Reservation, Thriller, Dark, Murder, Wyoming, The Snowman, Jeremy Renner, Elizabeth Olsen, Hell or High Water, Sicario
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The Girl on the Train (2016) Movie Review

October 19, 2016 Steve Baqqi

The Girl on the Train (2016) is a simple mystery movie based on a book by the same name, both  centering on the lives and extramarital affairs of three women and two men in Westchester County, New York. Rachael, (one of the aforementioned women) a divorced and lonely alcoholic, fantasizes about a gorgeous couple she sees while riding the train every day. The woman of that fantasy couple, Megan Hipwell, ends up missing. Amid her drunken blackouts and emotional frailties, Rachael ends up caught in a web of lies and illicit affairs as she struggles to find out the truth of Megan's disappearance.

Image via: Youtube.com

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Tags The Girl on the Train (2016), Paula Hawkins, Rachael Watson, Westchester County, New York, Megan Hipwell, Emily Blunt, Mystery, Drama, Thriller, Murder, October, 2016, Haley Bennett, Rebecca Ferguson, Anna Watson, Tom Watson, Justin Theroux, Luke Evans, Edgar Ramirez, Marital Affairs, Infidelity, Gone Girl, Women's Sexuality, Baby Factory, Reproduction, Motherhood, Housewife, Sex Objects
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The Purge: Election Year (2016) Movie Review

July 24, 2016 Steve Baqqi

The Purge has always been an extremely in your face franchise. The first Purge, to paraphrase MovieBob, was a brilliant idea that was utterly wasted on a silly home invasion movie. It’s sequel, The Purge: Anarchy, (remember Yahtzee’s formula from Independence Day: Regurgence) took the basic idea and setting and turned it into a graphic, intense, revenge action flick. Frank Grillo starred as Sergeant Leo Barnes, part Urban Rambo part Charles Bronson- Death Wish style baby. It was a massive improvement over the original, and par for the course was extremely over the top with its themes and graphic violence. The third sequel, The Purge: Election Year, wisely follows in its predecessor's footsteps by continuing to focus on Leo Barnes and using the extremely tense current (2016) election year as its political backdrop.

Image Via: Hollywoodnewssource.com

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Tags The Purge: Election Year, 2016, The Purge, The Purge: Anarchy, MovieBob, Independence Day: Resurgence, Graphic Violence, Intense Violence, Action, Frank Grillo, Sergeant Leo Barnes, Rambo, Charles Bronson, Death Wish, Sequel, Political Satire, New Founding Fathers of America, NFFA, Charlie Roan, Elizabeth Mitchell, Minister Edwidge Owens, Kyle Secor, Joe Dixon, Mykelti Williamson, James DeMonaco, Conspiracy, Hyper Violence, American Society, Crime, Murder
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