Search

Search only in certain items:


This list is empty.
     
Death Note (2017)
Death Note (2017)
2017 | Drama
L and Ryuk (1 more)
The occasional interesting idea
Light and Mia. Both very annoying to watch and have a lack of coherent motivation and general characterization (3 more)
Aesthetically bland
Tone is very confused. This movie has no idea what it wants to be
Rushed plotting, things happen too quick. This is made worse by the laughable twists at the end.
As someone who's never watched this anime, this is awful
  

Psycho (1960)

Psycho (1960)

8.7 (114 Ratings) Rate It

Movie Watch

A Phoenix secretary embezzles $40,000 from her employer's client, goes on the run, and checks into a...

Gremlins (1984)

Gremlins (1984)

8.1 (56 Ratings) Rate It

Movie

Billy Peltzer receives a creature called a mogwai as a Christmas gift, but with it comes three...


Gizmo Gremlin Mogwai
The Matrix (1999)

The Matrix (1999)

8.4 (113 Ratings) Rate It

Movie Watch

Neo (Keanu Reeves) believes that Morpheus (Laurence Fishburne), an elusive figure considered to be...


SciFiClassics
     

This list is empty.
     

This list is empty.
     

We Bare Bears

We Bare Bears

7.4 (16 Ratings) Rate It

TV Show

Three bear brothers (Grizz, Ice Bear and Panda) attempt to be part of human society in a series of...


Cartoon family comedy
     

This list is empty.
     

This list is empty.
     
American War
American War
Omar El Akkad | 2017 | Fiction & Poetry
10
7.5 (4 Ratings)
Book Rating
Amazing character development (1 more)
All-too plausible future
An amazing debut dystopia
By now you probably know there are a few things I tend to enjoy in novels. Dystopias, Fantasies, Debut Novels, and Diversity tend to peak my interest, and American War is a dystopian debut novel by an Egyptian-Canadian author.

And it’s FANTASTIC.

El Akkad did an absolutely amazing job of weaving together the North/South rivalry of the US, climate change, the changing nature of energy generation, and US wars in the middle east to write an all-too-plausible novel about the US, seventy years from now.

Alternating between narrative chapters following his protagonist, and “historical documents” about the time period, he masterfully tells the story of how a terrorist is made. Because that’s what Sarat, his protagonist, is. Let’s make no bones about that. She is a terrorist. But she is a terrorist whose reasoning makes sense to us. Perhaps because the territories and the peoples are familiar to us, perhaps because we see how she grew up and what drove her to it – but the end result is a terrorist act on an unheard-of scale.

I’d like to think this book would make people look at refugees and terrorists in a new light – with more understanding and compassion and maybe with ideas to help actually combat the attitudes and circumstances that lead to terrorist acts. But I doubt it. I doubt this will change any minds that don’t already understand the underlying reasons.

My only quibble with this book is while he manages to weave together so many other issues facing our country right now, he doesn’t really wrap in racism. And I have a hard time believing our country is past racism 70 years from now.

I was very pleasantly surprised to find the protagonist is a bisexual, gender non-conforming woman of color. How awesome is that? And her bisexuality isn’t mentioned, it’s shown, her one on-screen sex scene (and it’s only barely on-screen) being with a woman. (She’s also attracted to a man in the book.)

The author was born in Egypt, grew up in Qatar, and lived in Canada, earning at least one award for his investigative reporting while working at The Globe and Mail. He’s one of the Canadian Broadcasting Company’s 17 writers to watch this year, and I see why. American War is definitely one of my favorite books of 2017.

You can find all my reviews at http://goddessinthestacks.wordpress.com
  
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
Star Trek: The Motion Picture (1979)
1979 | Action, Mystery, Sci-Fi
A more cerebral take on the franchise with lots of interesting ideas (2 more)
Amazing production design. Great miniatures and sets. The refited Enterprises is still quite possibly the best looking ship in all of Trek
Jerry Goldsmith's fantastic score
Moves at a snails pace. There's a reason people call this the "motionless picture" (1 more)
Characters feel kinda lifeless. They aren't as interesting as in the show despite being played by the same actors.
Interesting, but uneven
The Motion Picture is very much an acquired taste. Some will love it's slower, more cerebral approach, while others will find it boring and inert and neither interpretation is wrong.