2023's Movie Must Watch (Again)

Here are four iconic movies you can watch over and over without getting tired! People in the film industry call these types of movies repeaters and without a futhur ado here are movies to watch again. Mean Girls why not go back in time and see a comedy classic that never get's old. Fyre Fraud Documentary —this movie is an ultimate documentary that sends message while conveying the story. Find out more below.

Mean Girls

Mean Girls

Bullying is outdated but Means Girls doesn't count!

In a wasteland of dumb movies about teenagers, "Mean Girls" is a smart and funny one. It even contains some wisdom, although I hesitate to mention that lest I scare off its target audience. The TV ads, which show Lindsay Lohan landing ass over teakettle in a garbage can, are probably right on the money; since that scene is nothing at all like the rest of the movie, was it filmed specifically to use in the commercials?

Cast:

Lindsay Lohan as Cady Heron
Jessie Wright as 5-year-old Cady. Rachel McAdams as Regina George Lacey Chabert as Gretchen Wieners Amanda Seyfried as Karen Smith Lizzy Caplan as Janis Ian
Lohan stars as Cady Heron, a high school junior who was home-schooled in Africa while her parents worked there as anthropologists. She is therefore the smartest girl in school when her dad is hired by Northwestern and she enrolls in Evanston Township High School -- which, like all American high schools in the movies, is physically located in Toronto. What's she's not smart about are the ways cliques work in high school, and how you're categorized and stereotyped by who you hang with and how you dress.

Avatar: Way of Water

Avatar is back! Run don't walk!

James Cameron wants you to believe. He wants you to believe that aliens are killing machines, humanity can defeat time-traveling cyborgs, and a film can transport you to a significant historical disaster. In many ways, the planet of Pandora in "Avatar" has become his most ambitious manner of sharing this belief in the power of cinema.Avatar Way of Water

Can you leave everything in your life behind and experience a film in a way that's become increasingly difficult in an era of so much distraction? As technology has advanced, Cameron has pushed the limits of his power of belief even further, playing with 3D, High Frame Rate, and other toys that weren't available when he started his career.


“Avatar: The Way of Water”
has topped $2 billion at the global box office, making it the third James Cameron film to reach this benchmark.
But one of the many things that is so fascinating about "Avatar: The Way of Water" is how that belief manifests itself in themes he's explored so often before. This wildly entertaining film isn't a retread of "Avatar," but a film in which fans can pick out thematic and even visual elements of "Titanic," "Aliens," "The Abyss," and "The Terminator" films. It's as if Cameron has moved to Pandora forever and brought everything he cares about. (He's also clearly never leaving.) Cameron invites viewers into this fully realized world with so many striking images and phenomenally rendered action scenes that everything else fades away.

Mazerunner

So you think you can run?

MazerunnerThe Maze Runner is a 2014 American dystopian science fiction film directed by Wes Ball, in his directorial debut, based on James Dashner's 2009 novel of the same name. The film is the first installment in The Maze Runner film series and was produced by Ellen Goldsmith-Vein, Wyck Godfrey, Marty Bowen, and Lee Stollman with a screenplay by Noah Oppenheim, Grant Pierce Myers, and T.S. Nowlin. The film stars Dylan O'Brien, Kaya Scodelario, Aml Ameen, Thomas Brodie-Sangster, Ki Hong Lee, Will Poulter, and Patricia Clarkson.

Cast:

Dylan O'Brien as Thomas
Kaya Scodelario as Teresa
Thomas Brodie-Sangster as Newt
Dexter Darden as Frypan
Nathalie Emmanuel as Harriet
Giancarlo Esposito as Jorge
The story follows sixteen-year-old Thomas, portrayed by O'Brien, who awakens in a rusty elevator with no memory of who he is, only to learn that he has been delivered to the middle of an intricate maze, along with many other boys, who have been trying to find their way out of the ever-changing labyrinth – all while establishing a functioning society in what they call the Glade. movie reivew texytt

Fyre Fraud Documentary

This documentary is fyre. Literally.

Fyre Fraud HuluTo most of us, the Fyre Festival, a high-profile debacle in the Bahamas in the spring of 2017, crystallized something about Internet culture. Here was the toxicity of social media for all to see: a sunbaked scene of disaster tents, soaked mattresses, and millennials with roller bags looking wide-eyed and dehydrated. LOL, right? So what if these people had been defrauded, lured with the promise of a luxury music festival that never came to be? If you’re seduced by models, Instagram influencers, and FOMO hysteria, this is what you deserve.ctually, what transpired on the island of Great Exuma that spring was much darker, more criminal, and more devastating to the lives of many than most of us realized. Such is the feeling inspired by Netflix’s gripping, supremely entertaining, and troubling documentary Fyre, which debuts on the streaming service this Friday. We already know that Billy McFarland, the young huckster behind the festival, a charlatan with a vacant smile, is a convicted felon.



Fyre Fraud is an American documentary film about the fraudulent Fyre Festival, a 2017 music festival in the Bahamas. Directed by Jenner Furst and Julia Willoughby Nason, it premiered on January 14, 2019, on Hulu.

(He didn’t participate in Netflix’s doc; Hulu’s competing, and less effective documentary, Fyre Fraud, paid for an interview with McFarland). And we’ve seen much of the footage the filmmaker Chris Smith has assembled to tell his story: the bikinis-and-boats sizzle reel with the likes of Emily Ratajkowski, Hailey Baldwin, and Bella Hadid that Fyre created to hype their festival; the smartphone footage shot by appalled attendees. Smith does a terrific job of stringing it all into a taut narrative—but the real revelation of Fyre is in the insider interviews. Here are software engineers who worked for McFarland’s app, event organizers he hired to pull off the festival, and the social media marketers who aided and abetted his illusion. They all speak candidly about how they were caught up and carried along.