THE LAST OF US [TV Show Review] – On The Yellow Brick Road.

HBO’s highly anticipated adaptation of Naughty Dog and Sony’s groundbreaking video game The Last of Us is finally here. The video game was lauded as GOAT since its release in 2013 earning unanimous praise and getting two remasters and, a not so beloved, sequel. With fans hyped since the casting of Pedro Pascal and Bella …

THE GEEEEK AWARDS [Best Geek TV of 2022] – Hell, We’re Still Catching Up!

5. Star Trek: Strange New Worlds - I’ve always enjoyed Star Trek but it’s rare for the franchise to really stay with me the way this series has. I would describe it as a sci-fi procedural as most of the episodes are self-contained, but the stories they have chosen to tell are not average by …

AVATAR: THE WAY OF THE WATER [ScreenX Review] – We’re Not In Kansas Anymore.

Avatar first graced the silver screen in December 2009 to overwhelmingly positive reviews and numerous accolades. Breaking all kinds of records and becoming the standard bearer for 3D films to come. Hollywood’s newest IP set the industry ablaze then nothing. Making James Cameron’s latest installment a hard sell to moviegoers, are they willing to plunk …

THE GHGAMER AWARDS [Best Video Games of 2022] – The ‘Ring’ of Power.

1. Elden Ring – When I was becoming fatigued of open world games, Elden Ring somehow managed to refresh the genre. I haven’t felt this much freedom in a game where my path and interpretation of the story was completely different from everyone else who played. It improved the Souls formula by a tenfold while …

THE GEEEEK AWARDS [Best Geek Films of 2022] – Everyone, Everywhere!

1. Everything Everywhere All At Once - You've read my review. This is one of (if not the) the most creative, expressive, genuine, and heartfelt movies of the entire year. A welcome return to the screen for Ke Huy Quan, and a showcase for Michelle Yeoh that uses and pushes nearly every single one of …

THE GEEEEK AWARDS [Best Comics of 2022] – JLA vs. Avengers!

1. The Human Target - Here, Tom King & Greg Smallwood take another nearly forgotten DC character, give every appearance of intravenously injecting all narrative content from Brubaker/Phillips in the past twenty years cross-blended with the Giffen/DeMatteis JLI run, then blast out the most obvious thing fully formed and nearly vibrating off the page, resonant …