Tag Archives: Writing

A New Direction

Every new year brings with it new seasons of change. Sometimes they mean working out more and practicing healthier eating habits. Sometimes they mean saving money and becoming more financially responsible. And sometimes, they could be just trying to be a better person. For me, 2025 is bringing many changes with it, including this website. Starting today, I will no longer be publishing movie reviews on DavidDunnReviews.com. Or at least, not in their traditional format. 

You see, when I first launched this website in 2013, I did so with the express intent of pursuing my passion, which was the movies. I have always been passionate about the movies. Ever since I was a child, I was always mesmerized by the sights and sounds of the moving picture and how its magic transported us to new worlds, time periods, and characters to fall in love with. I always knew I wanted to be involved with film in some way, shape, or form. And while many doors were closed to me in terms of filming, writing, acting, or directing my own movies, the possibility of covering them always excited me. I will always appreciate my many years of covering the entertainment industry because it taught me much more than just being a better writer: it taught me how to be a better person, which is sadly a rare takeaway in today’s hectic, crazy, busy-bee world. 

I always imagined that the movies would forever be a part of my life, no matter where it might take me. So why am I no longer committed to covering them full-time on my website? Well for one thing, my postings have become wildly infrequent. The last movie I officially reviewed on this website was Deadpool & Wolverine last July, and as fun and irreverent as that movie was, it’s a far cry from the best movie of the year. In my Top 10 for 2024, I placed nine movies above Deadpool & Wolverine. The only other one I reviewed on my list was Dune: Part Two. To cover an entire year of movies only to have properly reviewed just two of them is a grave injustice to me. It makes me feel like I failed as a movie critic — potentially even as a movie lover. 

The explanation for my infrequent postings most likely revolves around my second reason: I’m tired. I’m exhausted beyond words. I’ve never stated this plainly outright before, but I think any casual viewer can see that I don’t get paid to run this website. Instead, I cover the movies whenever and wherever I can, juggling everything between my professional career, my married life, my social life, and my hobbies. That’s a lot to manage for a 30-something-year-old man, and with juggling all of my responsibilities, my passions inevitably fell to the wayside. Perhaps that’s the trajectory of all dreamers as they grow from childhood into adulthood. 

Lastly, and perhaps most significantly, 2024 was the year that completely and utterly broke me: personally, mentally, emotionally, physically, and spiritually. Without getting into specifics, 2024 was the year where basically every catastrophe that could have possibly happened was hurled into my lap like a time bomb, and I had to hurry up and disarm it before the next one blew up in my face. I make no exaggeration when I say that last year was most definitely the hardest year I’ve had yet in my young life, and I already know for a fact that harder years lie ahead: that’s the worst part of surviving this hellish marathon. 

With all of that under consideration, where does that leave this website? Well despite everything else being up in the air, I don’t think I can entirely shut everything down cold turkey. After all, I am still a writer, and I have to have an outlet somewhere that isn’t Twitter or Reddit.

That being said, I believe my first order of business is recentering myself and giving myself a much-needed and deserved break. After my hiatus is over, I think it’s time for creative reset: a chance to hit the “redo” button and start all over again. I don’t think I need to start from scratch, BUT I do believe this is a time to reevaluate what I’ve been writing about, what topics or conversations intrigue me, and what I might offer to my readers beyond the generic blog posts every once in a while. No matter how you slice it, I am not the same person I was when I first started this website 12 years ago. My writing should reflect who I am today, not who I wanted to be when I first entered the world of entertainment journalism. 

So as I’m navigating this new chapter of my life and what it might mean for me and this website going forward, please bear with me as I figure out this new direction. You have all stuck with me through so much, and I could not be more grateful and appreciative for all of your support. I just hope you’ll remain patient with me a little longer as I figure out where I want to take this website in 2025 and beyond. 

Thank you as always for taking the time to read my work. Regardless of wherever this website goes next, I’ll see you all at the same place as I always have — the movies. 

Take care,

David

Tagged , , , ,

The Worth Of 500

The number “500” is significant for many reasons. For one thing, in Empire Magazine, they listed 500 movies as the greatest films of all time. In Tarot readings, the number “500” represents completeness: a sign that you have lived a fulfilling life and that it will only become more adventurous and exciting from here. Heck, at my current publication, we have a monthly section called “In 500” where readers can submit their own opinion columns in, yup, you guessed it, 500 words. 

All my life, the number “500” has followed me in one elusive way or another. This month, the number “500” has a different meaning to me. As of this moment, I have published 500 articles on my website. 

Yes, that includes the very same article you’re reading right now. 

This is a very strange milestone for me because it’s one I never thought I would reach. Or perhaps more specifically, not one I would have reached on this website so soon. 

When I started David Dunn Reviews in 2013, I launched this website as a way to express my thoughts and opinions on movies and entertainment when I couldn’t express them through other avenues. Before I even published my first byline on here, I was writing movie reviews under the notes tab on my Facebook page. 

I’ll sometimes read through my old reviews, and they were… rough, to say the least. I both cringed and cackled as I went into long-winded monologues diving into director’s filmographies and characters’ comic-book origins, completely unaware that neither of them are relevant when talking about the quality of the film you’re reviewing. And man, the caps. All of the caps. I can’t tell you how many times I wrote words in all capitalizations whenever I was excited, WHICH NEEDLESS TO SAY, WAS WAY MORE OFTEN THAN IT SHOULD HAVE BEEN. After seeing it for the 50-millionth time, I can definitely see how my reviews might have been exhausting for my readers at the time. 

But after joining my college paper, it didn’t take long for me to become a sharper, more concise writer. It definitely wasn’t without its own learning curves or creative differences, but after doing it enough times, my writing became more professional, polished, and easy to read. I still remember seeing some of the comments, with readers chiming in on how they wanted to see a particular movie because of my review, or laughing at one of my more scathing critiques. 

But the proudest achievement of my college career remains to be winning Best Review in 2015 at the Texas Intercollegiate Press Association for my review of the DreamWorks animated film Home. My proudest line in that review was where I criticized the main alien race for having “the intelligence of a kumquat and the personality of a doormat.” And most importantly, I got rid of those blasted capitalizations. 

I graduated from college a year later, which seemed scary at the time but eventually became something I adjusted to quickly. I started freelancing for every publication that I could (shoutout to MoviePilot) until I got my first official reporting gig for a local community newspaper. A year later, I was hired to work at a lifestyle magazine, which is the publishing job that I have always wanted. 

This website — and the articles therein — is one of many reasons why I was hired. So in many ways, this website is a big part of my success to this very day. 

I must admit, it hasn’t always been easy maintaining this website — especially during my first year out of college, where I was hopping from one freelance gig to another all while working my day job. But throughout it all, I maintained my love of movies and writing through every new release that came out. I kept reviewing movies whether they were good or bad. I continued my coverage of the Oscars even when writing my recap would take me well into early Monday morning. And every year, I kept ranking my favorite films of the year and sharing the movies that made the biggest impact on me — even those that didn’t make much money at the box office. Especially those movies. 

Now don’t be mistaken — I am still not where I’m at in my publishing career where I thought I would have been. At this point in my life, I thought I would have been writing film reviews for either a newspaper or a magazine, hosting my own podcasts, and talking to movie stars and filmmakers on the red carpet. That dream as it stands has not yet come to pass, although I look back on my experiences interviewing Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Aaron Paul, and Vanessa Hudgens quite fondly. 

But new dreams have taken its place that are bigger and better than I would have imagined. I’m still doing what I love, whether I’m writing for this website or for my magazine. I’m still watching movies, playing video games, and live-streaming on the weekends. And later this year, I’ll be marrying the love of my life. It’s crazy how fast and how hard life hits you, and I’m happy to say that, well, I’m happy at where I’m at in my life right now. 

It certainly hasn’t always been that way. 2020 was a particularly rough year for this website since, you know, no new movies came out. Then in 2021, my mental health took a drastic decline to the point where I had to step away from this website for a time being. 

What saved me and what pulled me out of my depression was, as always, the movies. Specifically, a 2021 musical comedy by Bo Burnham called Inside, which touched on issues such as depression, anxiety, and self-worth through a clever and creative lens of a comedian trapped inside his room during a pandemic. That film inspired me, made me feel seen, and made me feel less alone in a cruel, callous, and crumbling world that will probably burn up in the atmosphere a few years down the line. But I wasn’t the only one who felt that way, and seeing that film and the reactions to it reminded me that there were many others that felt the same way that I did. Indeed, I was way less alone than I could have ever realized. 

I guess what I’m trying to say is that I’m grateful. Grateful that I have this website. Grateful that I have my life. Grateful that I have you, my fellow readers, who keep coming back here to read my thoughts and opinions despite how infrequent they may be. This life of mine is not perfect, but whose life is? I find that the key to happiness is contentment: not in feeling disappointed in what we don’t have, but rather in feeling thankful for the things that we do. 

And I am so, so thankful for you — for any click you made on my website, for any words that you took the time to read, for any comment you left (provided it wasn’t a smartass one), and for any laugh or emotion you experienced while reading my reviews. So from the bottom of my heart, thank you, thank you, thank you for being a loyal reader of mine. You’ve made writing 500 bylines on this website more valuable than you know. 

– David Dunn

Tagged , , , ,