David Corenswet, now 'Superman', inherits a legacy of interactive storytelling from his grandfather, Edward Packard, creator of 'Choose Your Own Adventure', blending imagination, values, and choice in life and art.
Alex Garland credits the 1996 'Resident Evil' game for inspiring '28 Days Later', sparking his love for fast, science-based zombies and reshaping modern horror storytelling.
John Kramer, aka Jigsaw, is a complex 'Saw' villain driven by tragedy and a warped moral code. He creates deadly traps to teach life lessons, blending intellect, philosophy, and psychological horror.
Atonement explores how time and memory distort truth, following Briony’s lifelong guilt after a false accusation. Through nonlinear storytelling, it reveals memory’s power to reshape reality, identity, and emotional restitution.
'Tulip Fever' explores forbidden love and financial obsession in 17th-century Amsterdam, revealing how passion and greed intertwine. Amid beauty and chaos, both romance and ambition collapse under illusion and societal constraint.
‘Lost in Starlight’ swaps sci-fi spectacle for emotional depth, exploring isolation and connection in a minimalist future. Like ‘Her’ or ‘Arrival’, it uses space as metaphor—proving that even in silence, a story can speak volumes.
'Spaceballs' (1987) is a sharp, absurd parody of 'Star Wars' and Hollywood's commercialisation, blending slapstick with satire to critique media trends, ultimately becoming a cult classic with lasting cultural relevance.
'The Tourist' (2010) is a stylish romantic thriller that thrives on misdirection, revealing a twisty narrative about deception, identity, and illusion, culminating in a surprise that redefines everything.
'Went Up the Hill', starring Dacre Montgomery and Vicky Krieps, is a haunting ghost story blending grief, possession, and emotional suspense, hitting theatres on 15th August after TIFF acclaim.
In 'Damsel' (2024), Millie Bobby Brown plays Elodie, a princess turned warrior, showcasing resilience and quiet strength in a dark twist on the fantasy genre—her most empowering role yet.