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Soggy Waffles

Welcome to Soggy Waffles. Here’s how these bite-size, digestible movie reviews work. Every movie gets a haiku. That’s one movie, 17 syllables. Every movie gets a short write-up. I’m talking so short that you should be able to completely syrupize a plate of waffles in the time it takes to read the write-up. If not, then I’m not doing my job. This is my take on the movies I see, not a chewed up and spit out version of anything you’ll find online.

 And finally, every movie gets a Soggy Waffles rating. The scale is as follows:

1 = The Frozen Waffle. The type of waffle that you can still taste the freezer burn when you bite into it. That bite was so traumatizing that you it might be awhile before you can safely bite into another.

 2 = The Soggy Waffle. You don’t need a pick-axe or other climbing gear to attack this waffle, but the pneumonic device you learned in elementary school to memorize the cardinal directions still applies: Never Eat Soggy Waffles.

3 = The Microwaved Waffle. This is the type of waffle that won’t stick with you for the rest of your life, but damn you enjoyed it nonetheless. Not every movie can be a Superbad.

 4 = The Crispy Waffle. Oh yeah, it’s not the best waffle you’ve ever had, but it’s pretty close. This is the type of movie that cracks into your End-of-Year best list, but doesn’t quite make it onto your Best of All Time.

5 = The Toasty Waffle. This is that from-scratch, special recipe, best-you’ve-ever had waffle. The kind in which the waffle is so good that the act of adding chocolate chips, butter or even syrup would be sacrilegious. You can never eat it for the first time twice, so savor it when you’ve got it.

Logo and illustrations by Adrienne Luther.

Logo and illustrations by Adrienne Luther.

Welcome to Soggy Waffles Reviews. Here’s how these bite-size, digestible movie reviews work. Every movie gets a haiku. That’s one movie, 17 syllables. Every movie gets a short write-up. I’m talking so short that you should be able to completely syrupize a plate of waffles in the time it takes to read the review. If not, then I’m not doing my job. This is my take on the movies I see, not a chewed up and spit out version of anything you’ll find online. And finally, every movie gets a Soggy Waffles rating. The scale is as follows:

Soggy_Waffles_Draft-08.png

1. The Frozen Waffle

The type of waffle that you can still taste the freezer burn when you bite into it. The whole experience is so traumatizing that it might be awhile before you can safely bite into another.

Soggy_Waffles_Draft-07.png

2. The Soggy Waffle

You don’t need a pick-axe or other climbing gear to attack this waffle, but the pneumonic device you learned in elementary school to memorize the cardinal directions still applies: Never Eat Soggy Waffles.

Soggy_Waffles_Draft-03.png

3. The Microwaved Waffle

This is the type of waffle that won’t stick with you for the rest of your life, but damn you enjoyed it nonetheless. Not every movie can be a Superbad.

Soggy_Waffles_Draft-02.png

4. The Crispy Waffle

Oh yeah, it’s not the best waffle you’ve ever had, but it’s pretty close. This rating is reserved for the movise that crack into your End-of-Year best lists but don't quite make it onto your Best of All Time.

Soggy_Waffles_Draft-01.png

5. The Perfectly Toasted Waffle

This is that from-scratch, special recipe, best-you’ve-ever had waffle. The kind in which the waffle is so good that the act of adding chocolate chips, butter or even syrup would be sacrilegious (but obviously you still do). You can never eat it for the first time twice, so savor it when you’ve got it.

First Man

As a showcase for directing and editing, First Man is great. Maybe one of the best movies of the year. But if you’re like me, that’s not enough to carry a movie. As someone who absolutely loved Whiplash and once Instagrammed a picture of Rylan Gosling for #ManCrushMonday, it physically pains me to say that I liked but didn’t love First Man.

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In Theaters, CrispyGuest User
Mid90s

My advice? Run, don’t walk. Though there’s so many beatdowns in the movie that I walked out afraid someone was going to beat me up, I also walked out of the theater knowing that I had just experienced one of my favorite movies of the year. I immediately wished I could watch it over again for the first time.

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A Star Is Born

This wasn’t the sequel to a Jack Black movie based on a series of beloved kids books by R.L. Stine, but I saw some serious goosebumps in the theater today. The moment when Maine brings Ally on stage for the first time is just so emotional and powerful and exciting that it’s practically worth the price of admission itself. Scratch that, it is worth the price of admission itself.

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In Theaters, CrispyGuest User
Bad Times at the El Royale

If I was the type of person who walked out of movies, I would have walked out of this one. But to be fair, I shouldn’t be surprised – “Bad Times” is in the title – I just thought that only applied to the characters, not moviegoers as well.

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In Theaters, FrozenGuest User
Support the Girls

If there’s anything to be said about Support the Girls, it’s that it’s got a lot of hearts. The writers clearly want you to feel for these characters, and while I almost certainly did for Hall’s shift manager Lisa, I can’t say the same case was made for the other girls.

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In Theaters, MicrowavedGuest User
The Wife

I really was hooked on everything about The Wife until the last 10 minutes of the movie. I’m still interested to see if Close will get any love come awards season, but let’s just say I like the endings of her movies better when she's playing opposite a certain spotted couple named Pongo and Perdita.

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In Theaters, CrispyGuest User
The Miseducation of Cameron Post

While the film could have taken the easy route and leaned into the rebellion narrative like I expected, the final result is instead a beautiful, honest exploration of the confusion and messiness of sexual identity, gender orientation and religion as seen through the lens of teenagers in 1993 who want to believe they’re good enough when their families and society are constantly telling them otherwise.

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Eighth Grade

The best coming-of-age movies aren’t just able to perfectly capture a generation, but also transcend it. I wear it on my life sleeve that I’m a sucker for any and all coming-of-age movies, but Eighth Grade was unlike other recent standouts because of how much I found myself caring for Kayla.

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Incredibles 2

Despite the lack of a strong emotional core, everything you’ve heard about Incredibles 2 and know about Pixar is on full display here: the top-notch action sequences, the superior animation and the stellar voice-acting.

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Blockers

While the premise of parents trying to stop their daughters from having sex on prom night was stretched thin at times, it also made for a pretty fun lighthearted gross-out comedy. Nothing here is revolutionary, but it all works.

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Annihilation

Annihilation delivers on both the surface-level thrills and the deeper meaning parables. A heady science fiction thriller’s ending is make-or-break, and while Annihilation’s is even weirder than I imagined, it’s thoroughly satisfying.

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In Theaters, CrispyGuest User
Game Night

What makes Game Night better than your average Good Adults Behaving Badly studio comedy (I’m looking at you, The House) is the “Is it real, or is it?” premise of the movie, which allows the script to keep you guessing like a novel with an untrustworthy narrator.

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