Movie Reviews

This is where I’ll post movie reviews when I feel compelled to write more than a few sentences about them. Essentially just a rehash of my Letterboxd effortposts.

  • Slacker (1990)
    I realized that I used the word “meandering” in the last two posts I made here, which is truly a shame because I don’t think you could describe this movie without using this word, so I’m going to have to make it three in a row.  There are multiple references to the micro budget of… Read more: Slacker (1990)
  • How to Blow Up A Pipeline (2022)
    I have what I think are a few rather pedantic critiques of this movie, which I generally found to be suspenseful, well-made, and above all unapologetically radical; I feel like I’m harping on it a bit but I think it’s a very thought-provoking film so I might as well articulate them. First, the good: I… Read more: How to Blow Up A Pipeline (2022)
  • One Battle After Another (2025)
    My reading on this is that PTA badly wanted to adapt another Pynchon novel after Inherent Vice (my personal favorite movie of all time), but by the time he got around to it, he felt a greater responsibility to ground the story in a darkly recognizable present as opposed to Vineland’s comically cynical retrospective on the 1960s-1980s. … Read more: One Battle After Another (2025)
  • The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
    The sheer brutality of Texas Chainsaw relative to its time would have probably been enough to deem it a landmark in horror history, but it goes even further by demonstrating considerable artistic vision for any movie of its era, irrespective of its status as a horror film.  There’s certainly evidence of its low budget at times, but… Read more: The Texas Chainsaw Massacre (1974)
  • Bugonia (2025)
    This feels the most straightforward work I’ve seen from Yorgos thus far; while it’s as brutally violent (if not more) than Killing of A Sacred Deer and contains some of the same surreal eccentricity as Poor Things, it doesn’t feel nearly as slippery compared to those films, and certainly not compared to the incredibly tedious Kinds of Kindness.  It… Read more: Bugonia (2025)