Few films have left as lasting an impression as Taxi Driver. Directed by Martin Scorsese and starring Robert De Niro, the film captures a grim, haunting vision of 1970s New York through the eyes of a deeply troubled loner. Its imagery has become inseparable from its legacy, with moments that
Fuze movie review
Fuze unfolds as a high-concept thriller built around a deceptively simple incident: an unexploded World War II bomb is discovered at a London construction site, triggering a large-scale evacuation and military response, while beneath that chaos, a meticulously planned heist quietly moves into motion, using the crisis as cover for
Trek On: THE BATTLE
Title: The Battle Airdate: 11/16/1987 Plot Summary Picard has an unexplained headache while in talks with a Firengi ship that wants to broker relationships between the Firengi Alliance and the Federation. Captain Bok is unusually friendly and even offers a gift with no expectation of payment, Picard’s lost ship the
Andy Serkis on the Legacy of Orwell, Gollum, and His Passion for Animals
Andy Serkis was still a child when his father disappeared into a black bag. Before that horrible, indescribable plunge into uncertainty, the future actor and filmmaker had something of a cosmopolitan upbringing. Raised in Ruislip Manor, an area in the outer reaches of West London, Serkis is the son of
15 Burt Reynolds Movies That Couldn’t Be More 1970s
Few actors are as tightly linked to a single decade as Burt Reynolds is to the 1970s. With his swagger, humor, and unmistakable screen presence, Reynolds became the embodiment of the era’s laid-back, rebellious cool. His films often mixed action, comedy, and a distinctly Southern charm, reflecting a time when