Trauma reigns supreme in the cesspit that is middle school (anyone who says they enjoyed those years are bold faced liars). With hormones raging through the halls like a plague and the need to be cool and independent an unquenchable…
Vampyr and the Power of Choice
Choice driven video games aren’t a new concept. In fact, you might argue that they’re oversaturated as of late. Developers boast that you can change the outcome of the game and tempt you to play with fire. Will you give…
30 years Later, Who Framed Roger Rabbit is Still One of a Kind
After the trailer for Melissa McCarthy’s The Happytime Murders premiered, critics were calling the comedy title the new Who Framed Roger Rabbit. The concept of having humankind acclimate with talking puppets sounds pretty familiar, but to call it the new…
Hearts Beat Loud Movie Review: Kiersey Clemons Delivers a Star Making Performance
Everyone knows Nick Offerman as the ultra-manly, wood-chopping Ron Swanson from Parks & Recreation but now that the mustache is off, Offerman has taken on more grounded roles that let him expand his range rather than stilt him in caricature.…
American Animals Movie Review: A Keen Eye in the Director Chair Elevates a Basic Narrative
American Animals is based on one of the most ridiculous heists in recent memory. In 2004, four mostly well-off college students planned to steal valuable books from Transylvania University’s library in Lexington, Kentucky. These four boys thought they were clever,…
Video Game Review: Yakuza 6
Before playing this title, I had never known about the Yakuza series. What lured me to Yakuza 6 was my soft spot for anything Japanese and the fact that I may or may not have found the protagonist super attractive.…
Solo: A Star Wars Story Review: Alden Ehrenreich Kills it as the Scruffy Nerf Herder
Solo: A Star Wars Story had everything going against it; the behind the scenes drama, shortage of marketing, and the lack of excitement in general seemed to dig a hole for the film that seemed impossible to climb out of.…