Q-ell Betton
Founding member
Bio
I write stuff. A lot.
Stories (276/0)
'He's Out There' - Review (Netflix)
Laura (Yvonne Strahovski), along with her daughters, Kayla and Maddie (real-life sisters Anna and Abigail Priowsky) are going to stay at a lake house, getting away from the city for the weekend. Her husband, Shawn (Justin Bruening) is delayed, and promises to meet them later that night. The three ladies go ahead.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Horror
'Despite Everything'–Review (Netflix)
Four sisters, Sara (Bianca Suarez), Lucia (Macarena Garcia), Sofia (Amaia Salamanca), and Claudia (Belén Cuesta) are brought together by the death of their mother, Carmen (Marisa Paredes). At the funeral, the sisters, who are all very different, and whose lives have all taken very different paths, sees many male friends of their mother that they do not recognise.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks
'Deidra and Laney Rob a Train'
When Marigold Tanner (Danielle Nicolet) has a mental breakdown at work, and is caught removing a television from her workplace, she gets sent to jail leaving her two daughters, Deidra (Ashleigh Murray) a genius level, high school senior, Laney (Rachel Crow) her unpopular younger sister, and Jet (Lance Gray) their little brother.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks
'Twinsanity' - A Review (Netflix)
I am not a particularly religious person. A doctrine that invites self-flagellation is not for me; who needs to find reasons to punish themselves? Not me. That being said, people like to punish themselves even if it is in a roundabout way. Some drink too much, some take drugs, and others are risk-takers, lovers of danger. There is also the punishment of avoidance, not doing things or taking an easier path. This is, perhaps, the most common self-punishment.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks
'You Get Me' - A Review (Netflix)
Tyler Hanson (Taylor John Smith) is in love with Alison Hewitt (Halston Sage) a girl he has met after she moves to Los Angeles from San Francisco. Their relationship is going really well until they both go to an end of summer party. At the party, one of Alison’s exes from San Francisco, Chase (Rhys Wakefield), is also at the party. Chase tells Tyler what a party animal Alison was in San Francisco. Tyler drinks too much and meets Holly Viola (Bella Thorne) whilst going to the bathroom.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks
'Deadly Detention'—Review (Netflix)
Less than five minutes into Deadly Detention, a Netflix teen horror flick, and I knew it was going to be eye-wateringly awful. It opens with a girl running from an unseen threat, along narrow corridors in an abandoned building. We get a title card: Three days ago. We are on a bus with five teenagers. They are being driven to Wayview prison by Pete (Kevin Blake), who has a shrine to a deceased student, Jenny Duke, on his dashboard. Wayview, an old—now closed—prison, is to be used for Saturday detention.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Horror
'When We First Met'—Review (Netflix)
Is there a person that one is supposed to meet? Most of us have, at some time, been besotted with or liked the wrong person. That is life. Still, there is a train of thought that says we are destined to meet certain people and certain people are destined to be together.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks
'Cam' - A Review (Netflix)
When asking someone to rate something between one and ten, a score below six would be considered poor. Even a five-point-nine would make you think twice about watching a show. It’s like less than three stars—you wouldn’t stay in a hotel with less than three stars.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Horror
The Best Superhero Film Ever
It has been a few days since the event that was Avengers: Endgame happened. The media; newspapers, television, internet, have all covered the film extensively, both in reviewing it, and discussing various aspects of the whole MCU now that this chapter of the cinematic story has been resolved.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks
'The Perfect Date'—Review (Netflix)
Maybe I’m getting softer as I age. Films seem to have more of an emotional impact on me as of late. Not that I was some soulless, hard-hearted, individual before, but I definitely do get much more of the feels when watching a film these days.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks
'Peppermint'—A Review (Prime)
It was as far back as Luc Besson’s 1990Nikita, where the popularity for a lone wolf, female assassin/vigilante/super spy probably began. There had been female action films, and television, before that. The seventies had Pam Grier and Tamara Dobson, in Foxy Brown and Cleopatra Jones respectively.
By Q-ell Betton5 years ago in Geeks