This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.
-
-
The Social Network 2010
I think this is David Fincher’s best work. Him and Sorkin are able to pull of incredible, believable dialogue. This is probably also my favorite performance from Jesse Eisenberg. He is able to pull of all the right mannerisms that really sell it. Andrew Garfield, Justin Timberlake, and Arnie Hammer all also knock it out of the park. Everyone always points to the beginning scene with Mark and Erica as the best scene, and it’s great, but you can’t top the scene where Garfield smashes the laptop and their friendship ends in possibly the most explosive way it could.
-
-
Scott Pilgrim vs. the World 2010
Edgar Wright is possibly the single most innovative director of our time. Scott Pilgrim has so many subtle nuances that you can only pick up on after several rewatches. Great film.
-
2001: A Space Odyssey 1968
Once in a generation, a film has the chance to change everything. When the film came out, computers were rapidly advancing. 2001 showed people what could be. And of course, there’s the incredible soundtrack that is sadly now spoofed into almost oblivion. One of my favorite films. Perfection.
-
Steve Jobs 2015
Steve Jobs isn’t a normal biopic. While many years pass during the film, we are given 3 distinct launches, 3 distinct moments that define the man we all know. His cancer is never mentioned, the iPod was only referenced to, you aren’t gonna watch this movie to learn about he life of Steve Jobs, you are going to watch for the amazing cinematography, you are going to watch for the incredible writing by Aaron Sorkin, you are going to watch for the awe inspiring performances by Fassbender, Winslet, and Rogen. What a film.
-
-
-
-
-
Mission: Impossible - Fallout 2018
Humans are immortal beings, our bodies are nothing but a vessel. All hail Tom Cruise, advocate for scientology. The skydiving part was pretty cool too.
-