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  • Miles Joyner

    Miles Joyner

    Author

    A lifelong fiction writer, Miles turned to penning novels after nearly a decade of holding various...
Eagle Eye (2008)
Eagle Eye (2008)
2008 | Drama, Mystery
5
6.8 (8 Ratings)
Movie Rating
2008 conspiracy techno-thriller starring Shia LaBeouf (remember him?) and Michelle Monaghan, as two strangers who get pulled into a high-tech plot by a female voice in the other end of the phone.

This might sound a bit strange, but remember The Matrix?

The bit where Neo is receiving instructions from Morpheus on how to escape from his office workplace?

That's the type of thing going on here: do this. Do that. Jump now. Get on this train. Drive at speed straight ahead (with all the lights turning green). And so forth and so on...

Maybe also a touch of Skynet about it all...
  
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Erika Kehlet (21 KP) rated Micro in Books

Feb 21, 2018  
Micro
Micro
2
6.0 (2 Ratings)
Book Rating
I really wanted to like this book, but the dialog was so painful I almost didn't finish it. The descriptions and action scenes felt too choppy. There were more continuity issues and contradictions than I can count (for one, thing, if you are out of visual range of something, you can't look back in the next sentence and see what said something was doing!) and by the time we're 90% into the book I KNOW who Karen is and there is no reason to refer to her or any other character by their full names anymore, at least not so frequently.

The basic idea was good - and it had the potential to be an entertaining, if far-fetched, techno-thriller, but I couldn't recommend this even to die-hard Michael Crichton fans.
  
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Miguel Covarrubias (143 KP) rated Maniac in TV

Apr 23, 2019  
Maniac
Maniac
2018 | Comedy, Drama
Comedic timing is brilliant, cast is fantastic, visuals aren't distracting, great concept dealing with coping, Fun (0 more)
the wierdness almost becomes detracting (0 more)
The Techno-Thriller-Comedy that Nobody knew we needed
We unexpectedly loved maniac. It had a lot to say about fantasy vs. reality. The beautiful modern take (extremely loosely) on Don Quixote had a lot to say to the current era that we find ourselves in. A near future almost hopeless setting shines a lot on how we currently attempt to cope with our reality by escaping into our virtual realities. It's especially difficult on millennials who are trying to overcome the arrested development that we've been placed in. We had too much of a good thing, technology, and haven't quite figured out how to balance virtual with analog reality. 9/10 well worth your time!