To Catch a Thief (1955)
Little did I know I would be escaping into a romance novel with a sprinkle of mystery set in the idyllic Côte d'azur which most mesmerized me. If you're expecting typical Hitchcroft, forget it for it's a much lighter fare.
The Boy and the Heron (2023)
Not quite to the standard you expect from Studio Ghibli and it felt more like a last hurrah when I found myself noticing too many similarities between this and many of his previous works. It's messy, it's disjointed, it's surrealistic, and it's absurd; it's Miyazaki turned up to 11 and seems to be made for the Miyazaki acolytes.
Plane (2023)
Plane promises the viewer will see Gerard Butler as a pilot forced to save his passengers in hostile situations alongside unlikely companions and it delivers precisely that.
My Blueberry Nights (2007)
Legendary director Wong Kar-Wai's first foray into the western market and it is disappointing. Let me clarify, it's not bad, yet it is knowing that it's from WKW, like your straight-As student suddenly handing in a C. Everything seemingly felt contrived and I don't know if it's the language or the actors or both.
Molly's Game (2017)
A film that takes a subject I'm uninterested in and creates a compelling watch will always be appreciated despite its revisionist romanticism.
Carry-On (2024)
I did not expect this to be a Christmas movie nor to have this much fun with it. This is Die Hard modernized.
A Goofy Movie (1995)
This kids movie surprisingly holds up as an adult. I caught a glimpse of why this is supposedly a core memory for Millennials.
A Man Called Otto (2022)
Tom Hanks is a curmudgeonly widower whose neighbours are blissfully unaware as they cheerfully put up with him and life daily. It's a decent redemption story but now I need to watch the original at a later date to see which I prefer.