An Inconvenient Sequel (2017) - 7.3/10 - A persuasive follow-up to Al Gore's seminal climate change doc, this sequel may not hit quite as hard, but it also felt less like an actual PowerPoint presentation which was nice (at least according to my memory), and Gore is always a hugely compelling speaker.
There were some really intriguing issues raised here, like the India problem, and while it's essentially preaching to the converted on the whole, considering Donald Trump's refusal to acknowledge climate change, the fight must continue to be fought hard.
Annabelle: Creation (2017) - 5.3/10 - Really surprised this one scored so well with critics.
That's not to say Annabelle: Creation is a bad film, because it's not, and it's certainly MILES ahead of its dogshit predecessor.
However, it also strands a talented director and cast in a thoroughly mediocre horror flick powered by obnoxious jump scares you'll see coming a mile off and moldy genre tropes that stopped being scary like 15 years ago.
Also, what the fuck is this movie's tone supposed to be? I found myself giggling at a lot of scenes that seemed to take themselves dead seriously, which was a bit troubling.
The ending was pretty cool and it's definitely a step in the right direction, but just a bit lazy and low-effort from a narrative perspective.
There were some really intriguing issues raised here, like the India problem, and while it's essentially preaching to the converted on the whole, considering Donald Trump's refusal to acknowledge climate change, the fight must continue to be fought hard.
Annabelle: Creation (2017) - 5.3/10 - Really surprised this one scored so well with critics.
That's not to say Annabelle: Creation is a bad film, because it's not, and it's certainly MILES ahead of its dogshit predecessor.
However, it also strands a talented director and cast in a thoroughly mediocre horror flick powered by obnoxious jump scares you'll see coming a mile off and moldy genre tropes that stopped being scary like 15 years ago.
Also, what the fuck is this movie's tone supposed to be? I found myself giggling at a lot of scenes that seemed to take themselves dead seriously, which was a bit troubling.
The ending was pretty cool and it's definitely a step in the right direction, but just a bit lazy and low-effort from a narrative perspective.