13 Reasons Why [2017]: The importance of reaching out to people
A few days ago I made this post on Facebook, where I casually mocked random things people do just to…
A few days ago I made this post on Facebook, where I casually mocked random things people do just to…
The 25 Best Non-English Films – 2016 2016 has been an astounding year for cinephiles. As the dust has settled…
If you know the name Macon Blair it’s probably because you’re a fan of his performances in his buddy Jeremy…
What is the saddest and most beautiful love song you’ve heard? If that song were a film, it would inarguably…
Introduction to The Adult Animated Comedies of the ‘70s and ‘80s: It’s safe to say that a hefty amount of…
Martin Luther King, Jr. once famously said: “Violence begets violence”. While this is certainly true, sometimes violence is a necessity…
Back in my childhood, whenever my father came to pick me up from school he used to buy me a…
The actors bring Sorkin’s highly stylized and biting words to vivid life, and it resonates on a human level. Though Fassbender might look miscast in terms of physicality of Steve Jobs, but he combines incandescent aggression with cold calculation, egotistical bully, and control freak Orchestra maestro who knows exactly how to tune his instrument players – be it threatening or manipulating. Michael Fassbender becomes Steve Jobs. By the time credit rolls, it will be difficult to shrug off the dented image of anyone else playing Jobs character with such panache.
It is a huge risk to adapt a beloved children’s novella like The Little Prince, which is one of the most translated books in the world (translated to more than 250 languages) and sold more than 14 million copies worldwide. Although its water-color illustrations feel akin to children book, French author Antoine de Saint-Exupery’s observations on human condition in “Little Prince” are more poignant than what we witness in some credible, modern adult fictions.