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Zejtune – A Maltese Drama About Farmland, Folk Songs, and the Realisation That You Might Be Stuck Here Forever

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If someone had told me that the most emotionally honest Maltese film of the year would be about a woman trying to sell some inherited land while being gently dragged back into rural life by an 80‑year‑old folk singer, I would have laughed, asked if it was a joke, then gone straight home and watched F1 instead.   And yet here we are. Zejtune, directed by Alex Camilleri, is exactly that film: a quiet, low‑hype, home‑grown Maltese drama that looks, on paper, about as exciting as a Land Registry meeting, and ends up feeling like a long, awkwardly honest conversation with your own conscience about whether you’re allowed to leave the island or not.   The Plot, In As Few Dramatic Words As Possible   Mar is a young Maltese woman who’s decided she’s done with Malta. After a complicated relationship with her mother ends with her death, she’s left with a complicated legacy and a chunk of farmland she doesn’t want. Her plan is straightforward: sell the land, cut the li...

Perfect Days (2023): A Quiet Masterpiece About a Toilet Cleaner Who Might Be Happier Than You

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There are films that try to impress you with car chases, explosions, and last‑minute plot twists. And then there is Perfect Days (2023), a film about a middle‑aged man who spends his days cleaning public toilets in Tokyo and somehow ends up feeling like the most emotionally together person on Earth.   Directed by Wim Wenders, the film is a slow, meditative stroll through the life of Hirayama, a Tokyo toilet cleaner played with extraordinary stillness by Kōji Yakusho. It is not a loud film. It is not a flashy film. It is barely even a “film” in the conventional sense of the word. It is closer to a series of observations, a calendar of moods, and a love letter to the ordinary. On paper, the premise sounds like the kind of comedy set‑up that would be ruined by a punchline. A man wakes up early, washes his face, grabs a can of coffee, heads to a public toilet, scrubs, mops, sorts trash, and then goes home. Repeat. That is literally the plot. Repeat with minor variations. ...

Her: A Brilliant, Bizarre, and Slightly Terrifying Romance for the Age of Loneliness

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There are films that entertain you, films that impress you, and films that quietly stroll up behind you, hit you over the head with a hammer, and then ask whether you have been emotionally available lately. Her is very much in the third category. On the surface, this is a science fiction love story about a man who falls in love with his operating system. Which, if you say it quickly, sounds like the sort of premise dreamed up by someone who has spent too long in a room full of scented candles and technical jargon. But the extraordinary thing about Her is that it never feels silly for a second. It feels sad, tender, intelligent, and, worst of all, completely plausible. That is the real trick of the film. It begins with an idea that sounds absurd and then quietly proves that the absurdity is only there because the rest of us are pretending not to notice what modern life is doing to us. We have all become increasingly dependent on machines to organize our lives, filter our relationships, ...

The Whale Movie Review: A Bloody Brilliant Masterpiece You Can’t Miss

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The Whale is a bloody brilliant gut-punch of a film that hits like a freight train driven by grief, guilt, and far too much takeaway. Directed by Darren Aronofsky , the man who once turned obsession into cinematic torture in Requiem for a Dream , this raw and relentless drama traps you inside a grim apartment with Charlie, played by Brendan Fraser . Charlie is a reclusive English teacher trying to reconnect with his daughter before time runs out. What follows is intense, uncomfortable, and deeply human. This is not just a film you watch. It lingers long after the credits roll. Why The Whale is a modern masterpiece Brendan Fraser delivers a career-defining performance that goes far beyond acting. He does not present Charlie as a victim but as a man overwhelmed by pain, love, and a stubborn flicker of hope. Every movement feels real, every expression cuts deep. It is the kind of performance that makes you forget there is a camera at all, and it is no surprise it earned him an Academy Awa...

Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man — Why Sometimes the Engine Shouldn’t Be Restarted

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Peaky Blinders: The Immortal Man — Why Sometimes the Engine Shouldn’t Be Restarted I adored Peaky Blinders . Truly. It was television that growled rather than spoke — a powerhouse of grit, swagger, and cinematic brilliance that made other dramas look like they were running on fumes. So, when word spread that a Peaky Blinders movie was coming, I was thrilled. Finally, the Shelby clan would roar onto the big screen, all pistons firing. But what we got instead feels like someone swapped the petrol for oat milk — impressive in theory, catastrophic in delivery. The atmosphere and performances? Still impeccable. Cillian Murphy remains effortlessly magnetic; every cigarette he lights could be framed as art. The music? Top-tier, darkly elegant, and moody. Yet somewhere along the way, the storytelling lost its spark plugs. The pacing lurches like a classic car with a misfiring engine. The script staggers from brilliance to bewilderment, like it’s searching for a gear that isn’t there. And whil...

The situation is dramatic”: the truth Malta’s catering sector can no longer hide

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When a respected Maltese chef says the situation is “dramatic,” it’s not a soundbite for the evening news. It’s a clinical diagnosis. It’s the medical report of a system going into respiratory failure while still smiling in the dining room, napkin folded into a swan. Malta’s catering industry has never been so celebrated—and never so alone. Michelin-level ambition, storytelling, gastronomic tourism, TV cook-off shows, and influencers shedding tears over a plate of pastizzi or rabbit stew. Yet behind the kitchen door marked “Staff Only”, there’s often no one left inside. This isn’t romantic nostalgia. The sector is missing hundreds of workers across restaurants, bars, and hotels. Industry leaders warn that labour shortages could deepen if recruitment bottlenecks persist, with Third Country National workers now the backbone of daily operations. A 2024 survey commissioned by the Association of Catering Establishments (ACE) confirmed the crisis, citing enormous oversaturation, licensing is...

Funny Burnout Story: My Brain Broke — And All I Got Was Existential Dread and a Judgmental Toaster

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My brain didn’t just break — it staged a full musical number, complete with glitter cannons, interpretive dance, and a nervous breakdown in three acts. One minute, I was a functioning adult, paying bills and remembering birthdays. Next, I was making noises normally heard when someone discovers taxes or their ex’s new Instagram. Burnout , they call it. Oh, absolutely — the modern lifestyle badge of honor. You’re not officially a “thriving professional” until you’ve cried into a scented candle and whispered affirmations to your dying sense of purpose. I used to think burnout happened to machines, not people. Then it hit — like someone replaced my blood with lukewarm instant coffee and regret. The early signs were subtle. I forgot what day it was. Then what year. Then found myself staring at the toaster, convinced it was judging me for eating carbs. When your kitchen appliances start developing opinions, it’s time to worry. “Just take a break!” they said — as if rest were a magical reset...

The 10-Million-Euro Mystery Box Business: How One Man Turned Uncertainty Into Gold

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  The Man Who Sells What He Doesn’t Know   Meet Roberto Zaltieri, the 62-year-old entrepreneur from Castel Goffredo, Mantova, who runs a company called Stock Italwear. Every week, a TIR truck rolls in from Brussels carrying 9,000 kilos of unopened packages — rejected Amazon stock, unsold merchandise, or the world’s largest lost-and-found.   In an Italian warehouse full of sealed boxes, a 62-year-old man is quietly outsmarting every business guru on earth — and proving that mystery still sells better than certainty. Zaltieri buys this cargo at €3 per kilo and resells it at €4 per kilo to wholesalers, discount chains, and small shops. What’s inside? He doesn’t know. Neither do his customers. Yet somehow, his company invoices nearly €10 million a year.   That’s not retail. That’s casino economics. When Uncertainty Becomes the Product   Asked why he doesn’t open the boxes, Zaltieri gave a line worthy of a movie trailer:   “If you open ...

“Eyes Wide Shut” and Epstein: How Stanley Kubrick Predicted the Epstein Files

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Kubrick Wasn’t Making a Movie—He Was Making a Warning In 1999, Stanley Kubrick released Eyes Wide Shut , a film about powerful elites in English mansions running secret sex rituals, where women were treated as disposable, investigators who asked questions ended up dead, and the powerful man calmly explained how the system protects itself. Twenty years later, the Epstein files landed, and suddenly it didn’t look like a conspiracy. It looked like Kubrick had been filming a warning. Now, very few people in mainstream media are asking the obvious question: Eyes Wide Shut wasn’t just inspired by rumours. Kubrick shot scenes in real mansions owned by families connected to the Epstein network . Mentmore Towers, Elveden Hall, and Highclere: Where Fiction Meets the Epstein Files Mentmore Towers, the grand mansion that stands in as the ritual house in Eyes Wide Shut , was built for Baron Mayer de Rothschild in 1850, long before Epstein’s name meant anything to anyone. The interior orgy scene...

Scrubs 2026: Sacred Heart Roars Back to Life

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 They've resurrected Scrubs for 2026, and by God, it's like unearthing a V12 engine from a scrapyard—grimy at the edges but revving with pure, unadulterated joy. New episodes drop weekly, so pace yourself or risk withdrawal. The Veterans Still Rule the Ward Zach Braff's J.D. daydreams more than a kid on sugar, Donald Faison's Turk bromances his way through surgery, and Sarah Chalke's Elliot micromanages like a general on caffeine. John C. McGinley snarls as Dr. Cox, the Janitor lurks with his absurd schemes, and Neil Flynn's custodian keeps the chaos grounded. It's seamless, as if Sacred Heart never shut its doors. Fresh Interns: Clueless Chaos Unleashed Newbies arrive like lambs to the slaughter: a TikTok-obsessed influencer diagnosing via likes, a greenhorn who blanches at blood, and a pretty-boy surgeon who fumbles basics. J.D. shepherds them through modern medicine's madness—apps over anatomy, wokeness over wisdom. It's a riot of incompetence tha...

Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die: Verbinski's Diner of Doom

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Right, I've just suffered through Good Luck, Have Fun, Don't Die, the most f@@kin' stupid film I've endured since they let a lobotomised chimp direct Transformers. Gore Verbinski, once a pirate genius, has shat out this 134-minute black hole of idiocy: Sam Rockwell—poor bastard—bursts into a LA diner like a meth'd Grim Reaper, kidnaps a pack of losers (teacher, shotgun-widow mum, tech-allergic hag who's his own mum in a twist grimier than a paedophile's sock drawer), and herds them through time-loop hell to neuter a snot-nosed kid's AI that's turning humanity into VR-gobbling maggots. Plot? A necrotic fever dream of exploding school buses, clone toddlers riddled with bullets from "happy" massacres, masked psychos throat-slitting grannies, and iPhone allergies that make your eyes bleed pus. It's Groundhog Day  gangbanged by Everything Everywhere in a school shooting simulator, preaching "ditch your screens or rot" while the wor...

I Swear: Tics, Tears, and a Top-Notch Gut-Punch

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 Right, you quivering jelly of sentiment, I've just staggered out of I Swear, this Tourette's gut-punch masquerading as a sob-fest. It's a lad with a mouth like a faulty shotgun, blasting tics at life's endless parade of bullies and buried hurts, while mum and mates cling on like limpets in a gale. And Christ almighty, it works – had me misty-eyed like a bulldog eyeing an empty bone yard. Plot That Crushes Northern kid wired wrong, swearing through schoolyard savagery and soul-deep struggles, turning chaos into quiet heroism. No laughs here, just raw, moving truth – meaningful as a miner's lament, no sugar-coated slop. Like a sledgehammer wrapped in silk: brutal, beautiful, impossible to shake. Why It Stays With You Sod the blockbuster bilge; this is real stakes – ticks as tragedy, triumphs as whispers. Moving enough to realign your cynicism meaningfully, like a confession in the rain. Watch it, or admit you're the fool who irons socks. 9/10 – minus one for leav...

The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry: A Bloke, His Blisters, and a Nation's Quiet Tears

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Right, I've just slogged through The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, and don't get your hopes up for explosions or car chases. No, this one's a proper gut-punch: a retired everyman in inappropriate footwear trudging 500 miles across Britain to whisper hope to a dying friend. It's the kind of film that sneaks up, grabs your heart, and leaves you staring at the ceiling long after the credits, wondering if you've wasted your own life on beige routines. Plot: One Foot in Front of Regret Jim Broadbent's Harold Fry is your classic sad-sack pensioner—balding, beige trousers, a life of tinned soup and unspoken sorrows—until a letter from Queenie, his long-lost colleague fading in a northern hospice, flips the switch. Does he post a card? Pop on the train? Nah, this daft sod laces up yachting shoes and starts walking from Devon, convinced his sheer bloody-minded stomp will miracle away her cancer. Cue hallucinations of his tragic son, a gaggle of fame-hungry pilgrims ...

The Housemaid (2025): Sydney Sweeney’s Stairway to Disaster – Feig’s Mansion Mayhem That Should’ve Stayed in the Book.

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Right, let’s talk about this glossy nonsense called The Housemaid, the 2025 Paul Feig flick that’s hoovered up nearly $400 million by letting audiences gawp at pretty people turning a Long Island mansion into a human abattoir. It’s based on some airport potboiler by Freida McFadden, and Feig – the man behind Bridesmaids – has somehow turned it into a two-hour advert for why you should never, ever hire help when your wife’s got a track record of trying to drown the kids. Plot: Hoovering Up Trouble Millie (Sydney Sweeney, looking like she’s auditioning for a detergent commercial) is fresh out on parole for offing a rapist back in the day – fair play, says I – and bags a live-in maid gig with lawyer Andrew (Brandon Sklenar, built like a garden shed) and his nutcase wife Nina (Amanda Seyfried, eyes like saucers on springs). The attic door locks from the outside. Red flag? Nah, she signs anyway, because plot. Cue locked rooms, dodgy texts, a sweaty Italian gardener who looks like he’s smugg...

Sherlock Holmes: The Teenage Menace Nobody Asked For

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If there’s one thing television executives love more than ruining classics, it’s pretending they’ve “freshened them up for new audiences.” Which is exactly how we ended up with Young Sherlock—a series that takes the world’s most deductively dazzling detective and turns him into a moody sixth‑former with better cheekbones than sense.   It’s not that the idea doesn’t have promise. In theory, looking at how Holmes became the  Holmes could have been fascinating—like tracing a fine whiskey back to its first barrel. But instead, the show feels more like some well‑meaning attempt to explain rock‑and‑roll using an electric kettle and a PowerPoint presentation.   Every scene drips with the sort of self‑importance only teenage genius stories can muster. He broods. He smirks. He walks across cobblestones in slow motion as orchestral music insists that you must feel the intellect. Meanwhile, Watson isn’t even around yet, leaving our dear boy to mumble his deductions into Vi...