



When I’m not watching movies or TV, I love to breeze through a graphic novel. The following graphic novels may not have been released in 2021, but they’re the best that I discovered this year.
Continue reading Best Graphic Novels of 2021



When I’m not watching movies or TV, I love to breeze through a graphic novel. The following graphic novels may not have been released in 2021, but they’re the best that I discovered this year.
Continue reading Best Graphic Novels of 2021
Licorice Pizza
The San Fernando valley in the 1970s is the setting of Paul Thomas Anderson’s breakout hit, Boogie Nights. For his latest original creation, he returns to the time and setting to tell a coming-of-age tale that transcends the genre’s familiar trappings. Anderson is at his best when exploring the inner workings of his protagonists – usually grown men – as they’re thrust into situations that upend their rigidly-focused lives. And while he’s dipped his toes into the romantic comedy genre in 2002’s Punch-Drunk Love, that film was ultimately about a neurotically isolated man as he accepts a new possibility for himself. Licorice Pizza concerns itself with the feeling of young love, and about discovering the difficulties of figuring out the rest of your life when you’re still so young.
Continue reading Licorice Pizza – Movie Review
Don’t Look Up
Don’t Look Up is billed as director Adam McKay’s return to straight-up comedy after the Oscar-bait offerings of The Big Short and Vice. While it’s true that the film has more lighthearted bits of comedy than his most recent films, it continues the downward trajectory of his career as a maker of satire aimed at the easiest of targets. There’s plenty of satire to be mined from the end of the world – in this case an impending asteroid – but Don’t Look Up limps around for 145 minutes trotting out the same lazy observations without having anything new or interesting to say.
Continue reading Don’t Look Up – Movie Review
West Side Story
Steven Spielberg has conquered nearly every genre throughout his illustrious career: from horror to comedy, from kid-friendly adventures to sci-fi, from Oscar bait dramas to summer blockbusters. Yet somehow he’s never tackled a Broadway musical. His adaptation of West Side Story is finally seeing theaters after being delayed in 2020, and the wait has paid off. Of all the musicals coming to theaters and streaming this year, Speilberg’s latest was one of the most anticipated. But why would the celebrated director choose to remake one of the most celebrated musicals of all time, one that won 10 of the 11 Academy Awards it was nominated for, including Best Picture, in 1961? Spielberg has stated his desire to adapt one of Broadway’s musicals and that the West Side Story soundtrack was a staple in his home when growing up. Ever the source of the nostalgia of his childhood, the film feels like a natural choice for him under that lens (the end credits even reveal that the film is dedicated to his father, who died in 2020)
Continue reading West Side Story – Movie Review
Flee
Flee is a familiar film about refugees that excels because of its unique details. The documentary from director Jonas Poher Rasmussen tells one man’s story of his attempts to find a better life in a more hospitable country. Plenty of documentaries have tackled the humanitarian crisis in the Middle East, both from a historical perspective and a modern one. But the film takes a micro approach by focusing on one specific family, and it’s all the better for it.
Continue reading Flee – Movie Review
Bruised
Bruised is a film that’s filled with so many sports clichés that it may as well be called “The Invincible Hoosiers Rocky Miracle.” Some familiarity is to be expected within such a well-worn genre, but the film barely brings enough to the table to justify its existence. That’s not to say that the film is a total slog; Halle Berry’s directorial debut is pretty to look at and includes some likeable performances. But you’ve seen this film before, in one form or another, and that is what ultimately holds back its potential.
Continue reading Bruised – Movie Review
Encanto
The biggest issue that Disney has with Encanto is that the film is a Disney production. With the bar already set so high from the prolific animation studio, it’s becoming harder and harder for a new film to rise above what has come before. That’s not to say that Encanto is a bad film by any means; rather, it can’t help but be compared to Disney’s other recent entries. The film has all the makings of a great animated classic – and it may even be Disney’s best of this year – but when looking at the Mouse House’s total output, it’s hard not to be reminded of other, more unique visions.
Continue reading Encanto – Movie Review
tick, tick… BOOM!
In 2021 there will be a total of 9 musicals adapted from Broadway for the big screen. The world will also be subjected to 4 projects involving Lin-Manuel Miranda in one way or another in the same year (not to mention the hangover of Hamilton‘s premiere on Disney+ late in 2020). Those two worlds collide with Miranda as director in tick, tick…BOOM!. Say what you will about Miranda’s hegemony with his musical stylings, but he manages to distinguish himself with visual and dramatic flair in his debut film.
Continue reading tick, tick… BOOM! – Movie Review
The 94th Academy Awards will be presented on March 27, 2022. Here are our ranked predictions for who will be nominated and which films will win. Check back in, as the list will be updated often.
| Best Picture | Best Director |
|---|---|
| 1. The Power of the Dog 2. CODA 3. Drive My Car 4. Dune: Part One 5. Belfast 6. West Side Story 7. Don’t Look Up 8. Licorice Pizza 9. King Richard 10. Nightmare Alley | 1. Jane Campion “The Power of the Dog” 2. Kenneth Branagh “Belfast” 3. Paul Thomas Anderson “Licorice Pizza” 4. Ryusuke Hamaguchi, “Drive My Car” 5. Steven Spielberg, “West Side Story” |
| Best Original Screenplay | Best Adapted Screenplay |
|---|---|
| 1. Belfast 2. Licorice Pizza 3. King Richard 4. Don’t Look Up 5. The Worst Person In The World | 1. CODA 2. The Power of the Dog 3. Drive My Car 4. The Lost Daughter 5. Dune |
| Best Actress | Best Actor |
|---|---|
| 1. Jessica Chastain “The Eyes of Tammy Faye“ 2. Nicole Kidman “Being the Ricardos” 3. Kristen Stewart “Spencer” 4. Olivia Colman “The Lost Daughter” 5. Penelope Cruz, “Parallel Mothers” | 1. Will Smith “King Richard” 2. Benedict Cumberbatch “The Power of the Dog” 3. Denzel Washington “The Tragedy of Macbeth“ 4. Andrew Garfield “tick, tick…BOOM!” 5. Javier Bardem “Being The Ricardos” |
| Best Supporting Actress | Best Supporting Actor |
|---|---|
| 1. Ariana DeBose “West Side Story” 2. Kirsten Dunst “The Power of the Dog” 3. Aunjanue Ellis “King Richard” 4. Jesse Buckley “The Lost Daughter” 5. Judi Dench “Belfast” | 1. Troy Kotsur “CODA” 2. Kodi Smit-McPhee “The Power of the Dog” 3. Ciaran Hinds “Belfast” 4. Jesse Plemons “The Power of the Dog” 5. JK Simmons “Being the Ricardos” |
| Best Animated Feature | Best Documentary Feature |
|---|---|
| 1. Encanto 2. The Mitchells vs. The Machines 3. Flee 4. Luca 5. Raya and the Last Dragon | 1. Summer of Soul (… Or, When the Revolution Could Not Be Televised) 2. Flee 3. Writing With Fire 4. Attica 5. Ascension |
| Best Cinematography | Best Visual Effects |
|---|---|
| 1. Dune: Part One 2. The Power of the Dog 3. The Tragedy of Macbeth 4. Nightmare Alley 5. West Side Story | 1. Dune: Part One 2. Spider-Man: No Way Home 3. No Time to Die 4. Shang-Chi and the Legend of the Ten Rings 5. Free Guy |
| Best Editing | Best Costume Design |
|---|---|
| 1. King Richard 2. Dune: Part One 3. The Power of the Dog 4. tick, tick… BOOM! 5. Don’t Look Up | 1. Cruella 2. Nightmare Alley 3. West Side Story 4. Cyrano 5. Dune: Part One |
| Best Original Score | Best Sound |
|---|---|
| 1. Dune: Part One 2. The Power of the Dog 3. Encanto 4. Parallel Mothers 5. Don’t Look Up | 1. Dune: Part One 2. No Time to Die 3. The Power of the Dog 4. West Side Story 5. Belfast |
| Best International Feature | Best Production Design |
|---|---|
| 1. Drive My Car 2. The Worst Person in the World 3. Flee 4. The Hand of God 5. Lunana: A Yak in the Classroom | 1. Dune: Part One 2. Nightmare Alley 3. The Tragedy of Macbeth 4. West Side Story 5. The Power of the Dog |
| Best Original Song | Best Makeup & Hairstyling |
|---|---|
| 1. “Dos Oruguitas” Encanto 2. “No Time To Die” No Time To Die 3. “Be Alive” King Richard 4. “Somehow You Do” Four Good Days 5. “Down to Joy” Belfast | 1. The Eyes of Tammy Faye 2. Nightmare Alley 3. House of Gucci 4. Coming 2 America 5. Cruella |
| Best Animated Short | Best Live-Action Short |
|---|---|
| 1. Robin Robin 2. The Windshield Wiper 3. Bestia 4. Boxballet 5. Affairs of the Art | 1. The Long Goodbye 2. Please Hold 3. Ala Kachuu – Take and Run 4. The Dress 5. On My Mind |
| Best Documentary Short | |
|---|---|
| 1. The Queen of Basketball 2. Lead Me Home 3. Audible 4. Three Songs for Benazir 5. When We Were Bullies |

The Shrink Next Door
This post originally appeared on ObsessiveViewer.com
Almost any time somebody proclaims “I’m doing this for you,” it means they’re trying to swindle you in one way or another. The line isn’t uttered excessively throughout The Shrink Next Door, Apple TV+’s new limited series, but it may as well be the show’s tagline. The show – based on the podcast of the same name from Wondry and Bloomberg Media, itself based on true events – chronicles almost 30 years of manipulation and greed, all under the guise of self-help. Sounds like the set-up to a Scorsese drama, doesn’t it?
Continue reading The Shrink Next Door – TV Review