What is there to say about Bartek, he is best known for traveling and watching far too many movies. His passion for movies is only eclipsed by his devotion to creating the perfect crème brulé, a symbol of self-indulgence and elegance with a hard top layer, much like the man himself.
Bartek Shaarani was born at a very young age, a hard nosed and clear eyed man with a passion. A passion to provide the world with a movie review experience like no other; and experience that could only be described as transcendent, a journey into the mind of a psychopath, but one you can't turn away from.
He has become a man determined to change the film making world with reviews that you cannot ignore.

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“25 years ago the world’s greatest superhero vanished,” according to the poster for Prime Video's “Samaritan.” The narration by Sam (Javon 'Wanna' Walton) that opens the film gives us the Cliffs Notes version of how he did. Samaritan had a nemesis, a twin brother named—you guessed it—Nemesis. As kids “they were freakishly strong,” Sam tells us, and their inability to control their strength terrified the residents of Granite City. So, the residents padlocked their family in their house and set it on fire. The blaze killed their parents, but the mutant twins survived. Samaritan grew up to fight crime in the same city whose denizens burnt his parents to a crisp, but Nemesis’ understandable hatred made him a villain. Since his brother was now the enemy, Nemesis poured all his hatred for his brother into a gigantic hammer that became Samaritan’s Kryptonite and ...
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No, I’m not making this up, and yes, I’m writing this review sober. I haven’t even gotten to the part where both brothers kick the bucket when a power plant explosion interrupts their sibling rivalry. All of this information is crammed into the opening credits. I must give props to Walton for the enthusiastic reading of these details from Bragi F. Schut’s screenplay, and to the animators who bring it to life. The bombastic score by Kevin Kiner and Jed Kurzel is just obnoxious and overbearing enough to almost convince you that this overwritten

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