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The Outpost: Guardian of the Asterkinj (2021)
Season 4, Episode 11
10/10
Colorful, solemn and emotional episode directed by Jake Stormoen
26 September 2021
Jake Stormoen makes his directorial debut in episode 411 of The Outpost, a chapter endowed with great drama and storytelling beauty. Stormoen has managed to perfectly reflect the characters sufferings, who face delicate and dangerous situations that could bring death and misfortune. His understanding of the universe of The Outpost is truly unique; it brings a professional touch that is commendable and we should congratulate him.

Everything is colorful, solemn, emotional; great depth is observed in all scenes. It's a shame this series has been so underrated, because its originality and ability to reinvent itself have no end and I feel there's still too much The Outpost has to tell us. And sadly, there are only 2 episodes left for the season finale...
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9/10
A colorful, charming and fun modern retelling
14 June 2021
Bookworm and the Beast is a romantic comedy inspired, as its title suggests, in Beauty and the Beast, a kind of retelling that parodies and ironic this classic tale in which a woman of extraordinary beauty is left at the mercy of the whims of a monster narcissist who inhabits a dark castle located in untamed lands. The director Brandon Ho uses the most striking and superficial aspects of the story to tell a current story that is rooted in the negative aspects that the digitization of markets and companies brings with it, underlying another issue in its guts, which is that of appearances and personal prejudices, as well as activism and social altruism.

Izzy is a young public relations graduate who sees social media as an opportunity to grow professionally. Nicola Posener plays a brave and determined woman willing to give everything for those who matter to her, especially her father and her sister, and that she tends to think more often about what others want. In front of her stands her antagonist, Grant Bieste, the celebrated and acclaimed CEO of the G & G corporation, played by Jake Stormoen, who is the complete opposite of Izzy. He is a tyrannical, selfish and presumptuous boss who solves everything at the stroke of paper and signature and who even gets to enjoy the evil of others. Grant enjoys threatening and ridiculing small entrepreneurs by buying their businesses and putting them on the street if they oppose, using his power and influence on social media and the Internet, where he has created a gigantic digital monopoly responsible for redistribution and buying and selling of multiple items that can completely make stores and other establishments in the city obsolete.

Izzy and Bieste have in common that predilection for social networks, although each uses them for very different purposes, a fact that causes their interests to collide when Bieste is accidentally involved in a family conflict with Izzy's father that forces him to agree with her to avoid entanglements with the courts, large compensation and even jail time.

Izzy represents the Beauty in love with the books and Bieste the Beast of the traditional tale, from which some details or parallels can be seen scattered throughout the film, such as the red roses and other flowers of colorful and varied colors that sprout adorning some of the scenes, enlivening this film, which is ideal to enjoy with the family on a Sunday afternoon.

The protagonists, played by Nicola Posener (Mythica) and Jake Stormoen (The Outpost), unfold with grace, charm and ease, giving life to Izzy O'Hara and Grant Bieste, bringing touches of comedy and drama in equal measure. As a note to take into account, both actors stand out above all for their leading and heroic roles in other productions of the American and British market, which can make it difficult to identify Stormoen as the character of the all-powerful executive, something that does not happen this way in the case of Nicola Posener with Izzy O'Hara, where many will continue to find traits of the priestess Teela.

In any case, the chemistry between the two stands out enormously and their dialogues, quotes and phrases are too funny so that the eighty minutes of film do not seem too short. The character of Izzy is undoubtedly more serious than the fearsome Bieste, who is sometimes too comical to provoke hatred and animosity in the viewer, although little by little, as the story unfolds, she moves towards a more mentality. Realistic, since Izzy is in charge of taking him out of the walls of his virtual castle to show him what the real world is like and make him put his feet on the ground, an apogee that takes place when they both enjoy their country visit to the farm of the father of the young woman. It is precisely during this sequence when the evolution of Jake Stormoen's character is best appreciated, which may seem somewhat abrupt, since the viewer will hardly be able to perceive the intermediate turning point between the Bieste at the beginning and the end of the given film. The brevity of the film, which seems insufficient to show us some aspects that should have been key in the narrative development of the protagonists.

The opening credits try to compensate for this defect by offering us a quick brushstroke of the professional trajectory of both, but a few more minutes are needed to explain the details of the matter. For example, what goes on behind the scenes in the corporation run by Bieste, a detail that could have better immersed us in his ideology and even justified his despotic behavior; and, as far as Izzy is concerned, his motivations or his life project after moving from the country to the city. Personally, I think that Bieste's contemptuous attitude towards small and medium-sized companies is justified by the imperative need to extend his family legacy and to make his father proud of him, despite the fact that he is not physically represented in the film and it is only mentioned once. However, in the same way that Izzy persists in her efforts to help him clean up his image and recover the lost followers in social networks, promoting his transformation into a curious, responsible and committed person with the world from a proactive and altruistic perspective, Bieste is the one who helps Izzy not to rashly judge people without knowing them.

Bookworm and the Beast is a film that exudes color and feelings, with excellent interpretations and a current story that, deep down, shines more as a romantic drama than as a pure comedy and which is, in turn, possessed of entertaining and charming dialogues that will invite you to see it successively.
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Love, Lost & Found (2021 TV Movie)
6/10
A Walk in the Mountains
13 January 2021
Warning: Spoilers
I like the movie. I find it to be a nice and entertaining romantic comedy. It reminds me a bit of "A Walk in the Woods" (2015, directed by Ken Kwapis; cast: Robert Redford, Emma Thompson, Nick Nolte), insofar as in both films the characters seek to solve their respective personal conflicts through contact with nature, which is what allows them to discover who they really are, which they are their defects and their virtues, and the value of those things that they didn't consider important.

In "Love, Lost & Found" the journey teaches the protagonists to accept themselves, to know themselves better, and to reflect on aspects of their lives that their fast daily routines had prevented them from realizing. The further they go into the mountains, the further they move away from the city, from their work, from their social commitments, that universe that for them constituted their inner circle, the social representation of their self. Claire and Joey only measured their self-esteem based on their work success and the number of followers it gathered on their social media. Both of them undertake an introspective journey in which, the more they distance themselves from technology and their cosmopolitan environment, the more they penetrate into their own personality (the more outward, the more inward).

It's as if the city, technology and work have absorbed their personality and they have always lived deceived. Claire and Joey lived by and for other people, but not for themselves, until their accidental separation on the cliff made them think about what each really wanted. It's paradoxical to observe how Joey was more concerned with picking up his phone than going down to the river to rescue Claire. It's as if his love for her is summed up in a fictitious anecdote to gain more followers and satisfy those who already follow him. When he meets Nathalie he begins to stop recording so insistently and the turning point is marked by the moment when they both play throwing their respective phones to the ground.

I think this is well-reflected in the script. I even have the feeling that these actors also needed a getaway to the mountains during the harsh months of confinement, those days when every human being on Earth longed to get lost in some remote paradise free from the pandemic and its harmful effects.

Another notable aspect of the film is its photography, very well cared for. Those landscapes of Utah are wonderful, and the chosen music accompanies perfectly, being immersive, charming and perfect for the development of the story.

The length of the film seemed a bit short to me and I think it could have used 20 more minutes of footage, especially to add a little more depth to the characters and their experiences, since I have the feeling that the encounter with the bear solve too quickly the romantic adventure of the four protagonists.

The performing seem correct to me, although I notice that Joey Buf is somewhat forced. He's a bit overplayed in the first 10 minutes. He is portrayed as a young social media-obsessed influencer, funny, naive, clueless, boastful, likeable and eccentric ... perhaps too eccentric, and eccentricity seems like a stereotype applied to youtubers and influencers in film and on TV. Fortunately, he is maturing thanks to Nathalie. It's a shame that Nathalie and Joey didn't kiss like Claire and Colt, as I miss that romantic chemistry we saw between Marek and Dagen in the "Mythica" series.

It's a plesant proposal for a weekend movie afternoon. The plot may not be very original and groundbreaking; the budget, cast and crew are limited, but it's a brave production having in mind the circumstances in which it was shot. A very homemade-handmade rom-com. For all these reasons, I'll give it a rating of 6'5 stars out of 10 (6/10).

******
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