- Homepage
-
Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die review | Ambitious, uneven, and entertaining
Gore Verbinski’s Good Luck, Have Fun, Don’t Die has energy, ideas, and a terrific Sam Rockwell performance at its center. Its mix of AI anxiety, time travel, and comedy makes for an entertaining ride, even if the anthology-style structure keeps interrupting the momentum and dulling the film’s sharper potential.
-
War Machine (2026) a solid streaming sci-fi thriller , and one very silly ending
War Machine is entertaining and instantly forgettable. Alan Ritchson does a lot of the heavy lifting here as a grief-stricken Army Ranger candidate thrown into a brutal fight against a giant alien machine. It feels familiar, but once the robot shows up, the movie finally kicks into gear.
-
The Hidden Connection Between Leviathan (1989) and Underwater (2020)
Two deep sea horror films separated by decades. Leviathan unleashes a mutating organism into the ocean, while Underwater reveals a monstrous creature beneath a drilling station. When you line them up, the idea begins to feel less like coincidence and more like evolution.
-
The Omega Directive Explained | The Rule Even the Prime Directive Cannot Stop
Starfleet is built on diplomacy and non-interference. At the center of those ideals sits the Prime Directive, It’s supposed to be the moral backbone of the Federation. But buried deep inside Starfleet’s classified protocols is a directive so absolute that it overrides even the Prime Directive.
-
Night Patrol Is a Cool Idea Stuck in a Confusing Movie
Night Patrol feels like the writer saw Sinners, nodded very seriously, then forgot to do the homework. It is clearly trying to be adjacent to that same gritty social horror lane, but the writing and direction are so dreadful that most of the cast cannot bring the story to life.
-
Jason Statham ‘Shelter’ Review—Built for Streaming, Not the Box Office
Jason Statham’s Shelter delivers exactly what you expect. A brooding loner, a child in danger, and a shadowy agency. It is watchable, but never quite strong enough to rise above its own familiar formula.
-
Star Trek: Discovery “Michael Burnham and The Vulcan Privilege”
In the Star Trek universe, Vulcan seem to have a special kind of privilege that other Federation members don’t.
-
4 Sci-Fi Horror Movies With Strikingly Similar Plots
These four movies feel like sci-fi horror quadrilogy. They are alternate versions of the same cosmic nightmare. Each movie sends a crew into the unknown, unleashes psychological terror, and blurs the line between space and madness.
