Danielle Pajak

Danielle Pajak

Favorite films

  • Dune
  • Oppenheimer
  • The Andromeda Strain
  • The Red Turtle

Recent activity

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  • Godzilla Minus One

  • The Shift

    ★★★★½

  • Napoleon

  • Dune

Recent reviews

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  • Godzilla Minus One

    Godzilla Minus One

    So, I didn’t know I needed a Godzilla film in my life until this very moment. Dang, that was amazing! Powerful! Exciting! Resonate! This movie is to monster films as Train to Busan is to zombie movies. And I absolutely loved the look into the Japanese heart as they process their post-war trauma and grief. It was shockingly anti-government and strongly pro-life, in that there is honor in LIVING not dying. Here the Japanese heart is actively choosing to nurture…

  • The Shift

    The Shift

    ★★★★½

    Omg omg omg! This was an AMAZING film! This little Christian movie just made a more meaningful, conceptually compelling multiverse movie than the MCU has done in its entire run of movies and shows! Damn! Are Christians gonna finally take over Hollywood? I can’t believe it! My brothers and sisters! 🥹 

    Being a deep lover of science, science fiction, AND the indie science fiction genre, this film makes me SO happy on SO many levels! 

    I shall write a full and proper review asap! Watch this space! ✍️

Popular reviews

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  • Black Mirror: White Bear

    Black Mirror: White Bear

    ★★★★

    This review may contain spoilers. I can handle the truth.

    "And because lawlessness will be increased, the love of many will grow cold." Matthew 24:12

    This is the Black Mirror episode that I have been waiting for. Connecting themes in Hated in the Nation and Men Against Fire were explored, but this is the one I have been wanting! When I started watching this series, I thought to myself I wanted them to make an episode exploring the mob mentality of our social media culture, and how we take sadistic…

  • Mr. Sunshine

    Mr. Sunshine

    ★★★★★

    “I wish to burn brightly, then wilt. Like a flame.“

    A stunning and sprawling master work of Korean cinema! Could be described as very Dickensian, this beautiful, tragic, utterly glorious series delves deep into Korea’s troubled history and speaks not only to their national identity, but to the very concept of identity itself and how this is an universally human struggle. I couldn’t help but notice how Mr. Sunshine could even speak to modern America today and how generational and…