Jessica Alba

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  • ROAD

    What a twist!

    Scuba Puppy

    Blursed_brim

    meirl

    Gabrielle Union

    Forty -two

    Lily James

    “The Terminal Man” Review

    The Terminal Man: Directed by Mike Hodges. With George Segal, Joan Hackett, Richard Dysart, Donald Moffat. Hoping to cure his violent seizures, a man agrees to a series of experimental microcomputers inserted into his brain but inadvertently discovers that violence now triggers a pleasurable response to his brain.

    The concept here is a great one but the implementation is more “talk about the cool stuff” instead of letting the cool stuff happen on screen. I actually had to time one of the scenes, when they’re implanting a chip into the guy’s head because I thought it had looped somehow, but no, it really was a 20 minute breathless scene of them trying to implant wires into his brain to try to control his uncontrollable fits of rage. Turns out though that the wires didn’t do their job all that well and he escapes captivity to kill again, just not in any kind of fantastical way or anything that uses the computer chip, he just wanders around the city and kills a few people with pedestrian methods like knives and guns. I honestly thought this was going be some kind of US-1 / Headmasters thing where he could end up controlling technology with the chip, but that wasn’t the aim at all.

    Instead this is more of a commentary on men’s meddling with things that he shouldn’t and how technology has overreached it’s limits.

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  • Kiernan Shipka

    This one made me chuckle

    Sydney Sweeney

    Kate Winslet

    Lana Turner, 1940s.

    Transparent walls

    Lily James

    Zendaya

    bugOrFeature

    Meirl

    Barbara Palvin

    Information bubble test

    Cyclist

    “11 Minutes” Review

    11 Minutes: With Jonathan Smith, Dee Jay Silver, Kelly Pollard, Jason Aldean. Through emotional first-hand accounts and never-before-seen archival footage, this documentary immerses viewers inside the largest mass shooting in our country’s history, at what was supposed to be a festival celebrating country music.

    This is both one of the most difficult documentaries to watch, but also one of the most maddening, with all the real terror of the night hidden and censored, only the hallways scenes at the hospital were really showing the full depths of the insanity, the rest of it feels like a sanitized and nearly bloodless incident that doesn’t properly exhibit the scale of destruction that happened. Other than the censorship issue, this is an exceptionally well written and directed documentary that offers a stark reminder that it’s still just as legal today as it was on this night to purchase 10,000 rounds of ammo and set up a kill room.

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