Slate: Last month, The Social Network screenwriter Aaron Sorkin told the Harvard Crimson that "[a]ttention to truth and attention to detail were incredibly important" to himself and director David Fincher. By way of example, Sorkin explains that the filmmakers went to great pains to discern what "kind of beer [Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg] was drinking on a Tuesday night in October seven years ago." In reality, the name of the beer—Beck's—can be uncovered with a simple Google search. Sorkin's sincerity is harder to locate. In a New York magazine article headlined "Inventing Facebook," he makes a different claim about his honest intentions: "I don't want my fidelity to be to the truth; I want it to be to storytelling."
The Witcher: Sirens of the Deep Review: At least it wasn't horrifically ugly, but still very forgettable in the wider Witcher saga.
TNS: Captain America: Brave New World isn't the disaster a lot of people expected, but its shoddy script keeps it firmly on the ground.
Bogotá: City of the Lost Review: The movie offers a fresh take on the gangster genre by exploring the experiences of Korean immigrants in Colombia’s criminal underworld. The first half is engaging, but as the movie progresses, it falls into predictable storytelling that lacks emotional depth and excitement.