The Clearing Episode 3: Recap & Ending Explained: Interestingly, “The Clearing” is not precisely what television watchers would expect. Structural analysis of the show would suggest that it is less about the…

The Clearing Episode 3: Recap & Ending Explained: Interestingly, “The Clearing” is not precisely what television watchers would expect. Structural analysis of the show would suggest that it is less about the…
The Clearing Episodes 1 & 2 Recap & Ending Explained: Based on the book “In the Clearing” by J.P. Pomare, “The Clearing” is an eight-episode miniseries, a fictional account of the real-life…
It rained like a grand meteor shower. As if fire has descended down from the mighty skies to wreak havoc. The blood and ground became one and staged upon them was the…
Mel Gibson directs this film after a gap of approximately 10 years, and it would appear that the time has not put rust on his direction mettle. Hacksaw Ridge is perhaps the best War film of this decade and certainly one of the finest of this genre.
“Lights Out” is a genuine shock conferrer. In spite of it low budget and short duration, chills and thrills are amazingly well crafted. The climax makes for a little disappointment. Still it is a brilliant in many ways. The mystery boasts to deliver the message that possession can be dangerous but, blind faith can be even worse. Even though “Lights Out” is not as bright as you want it to be, its dark character build up, some solid performances and some stimulating sequences keep the film in the visible luminescence.
“Once the soul was perfect and had wings, it could sour into haven that only creatures with wings can be. But the soul lost its wings and fell to earth where it took a earthly body, now, while it lives in this body no outward sign of wings can be seen yet the roots of its wings are still there… and we see a beautiful woman or a man, the soul remembers the beauty it used to know in haven, and begins to spout and that makes the soul want to fly but it cannot yet it is still too weak so that man keeps staring up to the sky at a young bird, he lost all interest in the world around…”