Gangs of New York is Martin Scorsese at his biggest and boldest gritty history mixed with towering performances, violent street politics, and a level of style that turns 1860s New York into its own character. It’s messy, brutal, beautiful, and completely absorbing from the first shot to the last. Daniel Day-Lewis as Bill the Butcher…
Category: Movies
O Brother, Where Art Thou? (2000) — Review (5/5 Stars)
O Brother, Where Art Thou? is one of those films that creates its own little world quirky, musical, unpredictable, and completely unforgettable. It’s a Southern Odyssey filled with bizarre encounters, tall tales, and moments so strange you just accept them because the Coen Brothers make it all feel oddly natural. George Clooney is phenomenal here….
The Departed (2006) — Review (5/5 Stars)
The Departed is Martin Scorsese doing what he does best: chaos, crime, betrayal, and men screaming at each other in Boston accents. It’s a masterclass in tension, the kind of movie where every character is lying, unraveling, or plotting their next move. Watching it feels like being dropped into the world’s angriest chess match everyone’s…
Pulp Fiction (1994) — Review (5/5 Stars)
Pulp Fiction isn’t just a movie it’s a cinematic fever dream stitched together with sharp dialogue, absurd violence, and some of the coolest characters ever written. Every scene feels like its own short story, somehow weaving together into a film that shouldn’t make sense, but absolutely does. This is Quentin Tarantino at his peak: loud,…


