Flyerman
A sad portrait of one man’s obsession with becoming someone he is not. Or is Flyerman the real Mark Vistorino? Either or, this is one legitimately tormented soul.
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A sad portrait of one man’s obsession with becoming someone he is not. Or is Flyerman the real Mark Vistorino? Either or, this is one legitimately tormented soul.
Boisvert continues to develop as a filmmaker, building off his knack for tracking genuine human emotion – good and bad – and digging beyond where we feel comfortable and safe.
More than finger pointing and a recap of events. By delving into Dallaire’s psyche, it becomes an emotional and poignant journey.
The costumes, the sets, the music, the choreography, the dialogue – all are beautiful and from the eye of a genuine vision.
Misses a huge opportunity to make a scathing commentary on the isolation similar townships and villages feel.
While Porky’s may have spawned hundreds, if not thousands, of imitators, it’s having trouble keeping up with the barriers it broke more than two decades ago.
The Corporation is another strike against suits, board room meetings and the brands and chain stores we know we should hate but we use anyways.
Ginger Snaps is a satisfying return to mythology, cheesy gore and fear for the horror film.
Christmas · Films: C · Reviews: C
Never fails to take me back to a place of welcomed innocence yet it doesn’t make me wish I were back there.
Christmas · Films: B · Reviews: B
If nothing else, Black Christmas will always be remembered as the inferior older brother to Clark’s other Christmas flick, the Tito of the Jackson clan.