The 2018 Robin Hood Movie is Actually an Absolute Blast

Let’s be honest for a second. When the 2018 reboot of Robin Hood hit theaters, the critics absolutely eviscerated it. It was called unnecessary, a mess, and everything in between. Because of that, I avoided it for years. But the other night, I finally decided to put it on with zero expectations—mostly because I’m not a Robin Hood purist who needs every adaptation to strictly copy traditional folklore.

And you know what? I was completely blown away by how much fun it is.

Contrary to all that early negative press, I found this movie to be a total blast from start to finish. If you’re willing to let go of what you think a medieval movie is supposed to look like, there is so much to love here.

Continue reading

Did Ready to Rumble Actually Kill WCW? A Retrospective

If you grew up during the peak of the Monday Night War, you remember the smell of it. The smell of cheap popcorn, domestic beer, and the frantic, cocaine-adjacent energy of late-90s WCW.

Released in April 2000, Ready to Rumble was meant to be a cross-promotional juggernaut—a way for Turner Broadcasting to merge its cinematic ambitions with its wrestling empire. Instead, it became a fascinating, neon-drenched time capsule of a world that was about to disappear forever.

Let’s step back into the squared circle and look at why this movie is still the ultimate “guilty pleasure” for wrestling fans.

Continue reading

Winning, Weird, and One-Time-Only: My Thoughts on The Book of Sheen

If there is one celebrity memoir where the audiobook format isn’t just an option but a requirement, it is Charlie Sheen’s The Book of Sheen. I just finished listening to it, and I have to say: hearing Charlie tell his own story, in that distinct, rhythmic cadence of his, absolutely saved this book for me.

Continue reading

The Greatest Zombie Movies Ever Made

If you’re looking for the ultimate zombie movie marathon, these films are the undisputed champions of the undead genre. From George Romero’s groundbreaking classics to modern reinventions like Train to Busan, they’ve defined what it means to survive the apocalypse.

Continue reading