A plausibly fallible AI is a welcome addition to the pantheon of software overlord lore.
This is ClawReviews. My last name has ‘Claw’ and I review movies; the naming convention for this site is a stroke of creative genius.
All in 2 Claws
A plausibly fallible AI is a welcome addition to the pantheon of software overlord lore.
What if the legendary ‘Fountain of Youth’ wasn’t a fountain at all, but a location where time slows down?
Somehow the title is one of the least cohesive, most frustrating parts of this movie.
I don’t have a kid yet, so I don’t have a frame of reference, but watching Bonnie panic-stress about starting school was grating, and the focus on her emotional distress lasted far too long.
I heard about this movie while listening to an NPR podcast.
Does it surprise you that I listen to NPR, or podcasts?
There is an unfortunate trend where movies sometimes don't fit a genre, but they have a few jokes, and therefore they get labeled as "comedy," despite not actually being funny.
“The Wandering Earth” is a movie based on a book of the same name by Chinese author Liu Cixin. I’d never heard of the book or the author until the various tech and sci-fi blogs online started talking about the movie.
I haven’t seen Jennifer Garner in anything in a very long time. In an era of violent action films, it seems pretty clear that Garner was hoping that her own violent action film “Peppermint” (2018) would revitalize her career.
I can honestly say that I don’t think this was her ticket.
Let’s start with this: for a “film noir,” the entire movie was shot in full color.
As a series of seven kids books, the adventures of Harry Potter were quite entertaining, as long as you never ever tried to think about how the rest of the magical community functioned.