Review: ‘Frankenstein’, or, the Modern Disappointment

Based on Mary Shelley’s 1818 novel of the same name, director Guillermo del Toro presents audiences with his very own version of Frankenstein. Opening with a heated scene in the Arctic, viewers watch as an explorer’s ship works to free itself from the ice as an explosion across the landscape gets their attention. Sending out a small team of men, the crew finds a near-comatose Victor Frankenstein (Oscar Isaac) laid out on the ice and decides to bring him onto the ship—not knowing who, or what, will follow.

Continue reading “Review: ‘Frankenstein’, or, the Modern Disappointment”

Orcas Island Film Festival 2025 Capsule Reviews

Every year at the heart of the San Juan Islands, film enthusiasts gather in this northwest corner of Washington for the Orcas Island Film Festival. Venturing from near and far, by ferry or by plane, visitors embark on this five-day festival which features a lineup ranging from acclaimed international films to highly anticipated upcoming releases. Those fortunate enough to make the trip to this festival are simultaneously immersed in the world of cinema and the lush landscapes of the Pacific Northwest.

Some of the most anticipated films of the 2025 Orcas Island Film Festival include It Was Just an Accident, No Other Choice, and Nouvelle Vague, while it opened with Christy and closed with a sold-out screening of Hamnet. From our time at the festival’s last two days, here are the six films we were able to catch. 

Continue reading “Orcas Island Film Festival 2025 Capsule Reviews”

Review: ‘Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio’: Unbound by the Strings of Expectation

For some godforsaken reason, pop culture is currently in the midst of a Pinocchio epidemic. Left and right, up and down, Pinocchio is everywhere. Disney dumped out their live-action remake of Pinocchio earlier this year, a drab, mostly beat-for-beat remake, apart from the addition of pop culture references and Disney+ advertising. Then, over from Russia, we have the infamous Pinocchio: A True Story, a very-fictional animated film starring Pauly Shore, which is almost certainly a front for a mafia money-laundering scheme. And, finally, in the world of gaming, we have Lies of P, a grim-and-gritty reimagining of Pinocchio as a magical steampunk Blade Runner, where Pinocchio himself resembles a cybernetically-enhanced Timothée Chalamet. It’s a little unfair to lump that last one in with the others, but regardless, Pinocchio has become an icon of unoriginality, a soulless husk puppeteered by corporate forces looking to make an easy profit off name-recognition. But just as it seemed that there was no integrity left, out has emerged Guillermo del Toro to grant the character life once again.

Continue reading “Review: ‘Guillermo del Toro’s Pinocchio’: Unbound by the Strings of Expectation”