Author: Greg


  • In Search of Lost Time

    In Search of Lost Time

    Or: How I Learned to Love My E-reader All things held steady, life becomes less surprising as one grows older. We learn what we like, we learn what works, and we settle into a pattern of trying to merge the two in as many ways as we can. However, focused as we are on such […]

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  • A Minecraft Movie

    A Minecraft Movie

    Hess | 2025 | USA The marketing for this film really worked on the little guy, despite the fact that he’s never played Minecraft and doesn’t really know what it is. And so… his first movie in a cinema was the one he wanted to see. We cuddled. We ate popcorn. We danced to the […]

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  • Lost Highway

    Lost Highway

    Lynch | 1997 | France, USA My year of David Lynch continues with what might be my favourite yet. Here the echoes of Twin Peaks resound rather clearly, and in ways that extend beyond red velvet curtains. Sound is the thing with a Lynch film, and it does a lot of the work here. Above […]

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  • Death of a Unicorn

    Death of a Unicorn

    Scharfman | 2025 | USA I guess we’re at the point where A24 movies are a genre unto themselves, and this movie feels like the salient indicator. I’d have been more excited about such a development 5-6 years ago, but starting with Bodies Bodies Bodies the guiding question has become “how violent can we make […]

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  • The Souvenir: Part II

    The Souvenir: Part II

    Hogg | 2021 | USA, UK Second viewing. In recent years, l’ve become somewhat obsessed with memory as a concept, and art-as-memory is a component of that obsession. When you convert memory into art, you freeze it in time and thereafter you can engage with it as an artifact of having previously engaged with the […]

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  • The Souvenir

    The Souvenir

    Hogg | 2019 | UK, USA Second viewing. I wrote this last time and frankly, nothing has changed: Exceptionally lovely, despite treading dark and painful water. Honor Swinton Byrne navigates the highs and lows deftly, guiding us toward a magical moment in the penultimate shot that I dare not spoil for fear of undercutting its power.

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  • Back to the Future

    Back to the Future

    Zemeckis | 1985 | USA Umpteenth viewing. Still my favourite movie of all time; it captured my imagination when I was a kid and never let me go. The final two lines even provided the introduction to my PhD thesis. Fox and Lloyd are inimitably iconic in their roles; the music is perfect and timeless […]

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  • Blue Velvet

    Blue Velvet

    Lynch | 1986 | USA Singularly oneiric, as is all of his work. I am drawn to cinema in part because it indulges my inner voyeur, and this film knows that we all have that same perversion. After having discovered him hiding in her closet the night before, Dorothy tells Jeffrey that she looked for […]

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  • Happy Death Day

    Happy Death Day

    Landon | 2017 | USA Second viewing. I was well overdue to revisit this one, being the underrated and under-appreciated gem it is. Jessica Rothe understands the assignment — I’m not exaggerating when I say her performance is one of my favourites in recent memory. Elsewhere, craft shines through to remind you that movies are […]

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  • Borderline

    Borderline

    Warden | 2025 | Canada, USA Nicely proves the point that horror comedy requires a deft and precise blend of elements to work by, well, not striking that balance. Still, Samara Weaving turned up for work and managed to be funny by being openly annoyed by the proceedings.

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