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I won’t lie, I was nervous when I started watching Luca. In a group watch with my friends, I saw that Luca was curious about the surface world and that Alberto collected human items, and I worried that the movie was just copying themes from The Little Mermaid (much like how The Good Dinosaur used a lot of similar themes to The Lion King). Luckily Luca becomes its own story—one that focuses on the importance and complexities of friendship above anything else, and one that has quickly become one my favorites.

Luca follows a twelve-year-old sea monster, curious about the surface world but taught to fear it by his overprotective parents. When Luca befriends Alberto, a fellow sea monster who lives on the surface, he encourages Luca to explore the surface. There he learns that when dry, sea monsters appear human, and they resume their scaly appearance when wet. But the fun doesn’t last for Luca. When his parents discover he’s been to the surface, they plan to send him to live with his uncle in the deep sea. Luca and Alberto then run away to the nearby port town of Portorosso. Their main goal is to get a vespa and go on adventures together.A Review of Luca and Friendship

What I adored about Luca was its simple message of friendship. I also enjoyed finding out that Enrico Cassarosa used his own childhood friendship, as well as Studio Ghibli films, as inspiration for the film. The two boys find a friend in each other, and Alberto helps bring sheltered Luca out of his shell by showing him the wonders of the human world he’s been taught to fear. From the knick-knacks he collects in the ocean to gelato and vespas, Alberto shares his interests with Luca and tries to get his friend to stop being afraid.

But, it’s the honest look at friendship that made Luca so special to me. From the start of Luca and Alberto’s friendship, they build their own vespa and then hide in the nearby port town of Portorosso. They have the goal of winning enough prize money to buy a vespa of their own. And then their friendship with Guilia brings conflict, because even the best and strongest of friendships have conflict.

Guilia is not an antagonistic character and doesn’t actively try to stop Luca and Alberto from being friends, but her presence ends up bringing its own trouble. Luca and Alberto befriend Guilia so the three can team up to win the Portorosso Cup and use the prize money to buy the vespa Alberto and Luca yearn for. While both boys are friends with Guilia, it’s Luca that she shares an interest with astronomy and school with. When Alberto sees the friendship between them, not having the shared interest with them makes him feels threatened. Alberto’s goal throughout the movie is to win enough money to buy a vespa and go on adventures with Luca, who he has trusted and devoted himself to after being abandoned by his father. Fearing that abandonment again, Alberto lashes out, being cruel to Luca and Guilia, and eventually reveals himself as a sea monster to Guilia. That leads to Luca’s betrayal as he lies about knowing that Alberto is a sea monster (and that he is as well).

Aside from revealing himself to be a sea monster, Alberto’s fear and anger about possibly losing Luca really resonated with me (and I’m sure resonates with a lot of people). Because who in a group of friends hasn’t felt the way Alberto has? Who hasn’t watched as two friends begin getting closer and you realize you have nothing to contribute to the conversation? Who hasn’t been pushed out because you’re no longer compatible with two friends who now are compatible? Who hasn’t lost a friend because someone better has come along? And even if not everyone has experienced it, we’ve all feared it happening. Even in the closest of friendships that fear of rejection, of losing a best friend, of not being interesting enough or worthy enough to continue being friends with, that feeling exists. I liked that Luca chose to show the ups and downs and complexities of keeping friendships.

But things work out for Alberto, Luca, and Guilia in the end. Luca and Alberto acknowledge how they hurt one another and realize that helping one another reach their goals is more important than not being friends, even if those goals have changed. By the movie’s end, Luca decides to go with Guilia to school, and Alberto finds a home in Portorosso with Guilia’s father. The three remain friends and promise to stay in contact with each other, all of them receiving their happy endings even if they weren’t the happy endings they envisioned at the start.

I also found Luca to be nostalgic in some ways. With everything that’s happened in the past year, my main contact with friends has been virtual. While it’s awesome that we can contact each other digitally during a pandemic (including watching Luca), I’ve missed seeing my friends in person, missed the little adventures we would go on and just getting to hang out and laugh with them, for things to return to normal again. And while the world slowly inches its way to normalcy, or whatever normal will be once the pandemic ends, I’m excited that the chance to see my friends again safely is coming.

Luca is a movie about friendship, and that’s a surprisingly rare theme to find in movies. Even in movies aimed for children, it’s hard to find one that shows the importance of platonic relationships because so much of our media focuses on a happily ever after, which generally comes from a romantic relationship. Luca proves that happy endings can be found through our friends, through our goals and dreams that our friends encourage us to take, and our friends who even far away are always on the sidelines cheering us on.

First off, a trigger warning: Promising Young Woman has a heavy focus on sexual assault. If that subject matter is too disturbing or triggering to you in any way, this may not be the movie for you. I’ll be discussing sexual assault in this review as well, though I will not be spoiling any major plot points for the film. Please proceed in a way that keeps you feeling safe and honors your needs.

Love him or hate him, one thing is abundantly clear: Zack Snyder loves DC comics.

A good superhero movie will leave you with a lot to think about, whether from a moral and philosophical standpoint or simply from a “that was great, I want more, and what did that little Easter egg mean?” standpoint. I think especially for self-identified geeks, they give us a fantastical way to suss out our feelings about the world while letting us escape from it for a few hours. Zack Snyder gave me four good hours of escape this weekend.

The problem with trying to objectively review a Zack Snyder movie is just how polarizing he can be to comic fans and casual moviegoers alike. It feels like people either love his style (guilty) or find him to be a total drag. That said, I think if you love DC comics, you’ll at least appreciate what Zack Snyder is trying to do with his take on the Justice League’s origins. Fair warning, this review will have some very light spoilers for Zack Snyder’s Justice League

Zack Snyder's Justice League Left Me Wanting More

Setting aside the 2017 theatrical cut for a moment, let’s just talk about the movie as a standalone. As a follow-up story to Batman v Superman: Dawn of JusticeZack Snyder’s Justice League does an excellent job of paying off what the previous movie promised. We open on the immediate aftermath of Superman’s death and see Lex Luthor’s prophesied bell “ringing” to wake up this movie’s big bad guys. What follows is 6 chapters (a total runtime of 4 hours and 2 minutes) that take their time to craft a story rich with lore and nods to the source material that brought it to life. Watching it sometimes felt like Lord of the Rings in its attention to narrative details and world-building. Each member of the Justice League gets a moment to shine and develop their stories, making the final battle feel appropriately high stakes and the ultimate team-up pay off.

Some things remain from the the 2017 theatrical release (albeit not many), some for better and others for worse. I don’t find Steppenwolf to be a particularly compelling villain/antagonist, but I understand that we need something big and bad for the Justice League to team up against, so in that regard he felt like a worthy foe. The extended runtime gave the story room to unwind itself and let the large cast of characters breathe and develop. On that note, the casting is excellent and this movie left me wanting more of this particular Justice League (especially the epilogue!) 

Zack Snyder's Justice League Left Me Wanting More

I’d be remiss if I didn’t spend a moment to compare and contrast against the theatrical cut of Justice League. This review, as much as it can, is based on the merits of the film. However, I can’t wholly set aside my criticisms of Joss Whedon’s take on Justice League, some of which weren’t to my taste, while others are issues most critics and fans agree made the theatrical cut unpopular. The pace and tone of this movie are a better fit to Batman v Superman and the story set up in that movie. And, while the movie is more somber than the Whedon version, there are moments of levity that add humor without making you cringe. Key differences in music and dialogue will either delight or dismay you, depending largely on how you like your superhero movies; fans of a more serious take on DC comic characters will be pleased.

All in all, I recommend you give Zack Snyder’s Justice League a try. Its runtime may be daunting, but it’s nothing some snacks and a planned intermission or two can’t fix. Personally, I didn’t want to leave this story once I jumped in; I had planned to watch it in two, spaced out two-hour long blocks and ended up blitzing through it in one. Expect Zack Snyder’s usual flair: desaturated colors, slow mo action, somber tone, and dramatic music cues with sweet guitar riffs. If that’s not something you’ve liked in his other movies, then the Snyder Cut might not be for you. That said, if you’re a DC fan, I think you’ll be glad to sink into this dense comic book story for a few hours and get lost in lore. I know I was.

Fans have been waiting with bated breath for the return of the final episodes of Shadowhunters. Now that the team is back, they are ready to make their mark on television one last time. The episode started off with an amazing fight sequence. It was then filled with emotional tributes to Clary, love, and brotherhood, and ended with, of course, a cliffhanger.