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Robbie
Writer
Staff Writer
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Join date: Feb 28, 2025
About
A UK based film reviewer. Robbie started reviewing films in 2020 during the covid pandemic. He started a freelance website on his own called Robbie's Reviews. Unfortunately in 2023, the website got shut down and Robbie took a hiatus.
However, in 2024, Robbie returned to film reviewing with the YouTube channel Fright Night Flix and became a media correspondent for Keziah Hyde Media.
Robbie has also made some amazing friends over his film reviewing career and has also been featured on the podcast "I Love That Movie"
Robbie sets a lot of bars being the first male and the first British writer for this website.
Posts (16)
Nov 7, 2025 ∙ 2 min
Review: Why Nia DaCosta’s 'Hedda' Deserves More Attention
I’d been planning to check out Hedda for a while, partly because I’m a fan of Nia DaCosta and partly because I’m surprised this release has flown under the radar, especially with her 20 Years Later sequel on the horizon. So when I was asked to cover the film for the TV Cave, it felt like the perfect opportunity—especially since I’m putting together a DaCosta ranking video for my horror channel, Fright Night Flix. DaCosta’s first feature since The Marvels feels very much like a...
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Nov 3, 2025 ∙ 2 min
Bugonia Review: Yorgos Lanthimos and Emma Stone Deliver a Dark, Brilliant Sci-Fi Remake
Is Bugonia a solid remake? Yorgos Lanthimos teams up once again with Emma Stone and Jesse Plemons to bring us Bugonia — a remake of the South Korean cult classic Save the Green Planet. As a fan of all three of these names, I was curious to see what they could bring to the table this time around. I watched Save the Green Planet beforehand, so I knew roughly what to expect. While I found the original good for what it was, I was interested to see what Bugonia might do differently. Now that I’ve...
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Oct 18, 2025 ∙ 2 min
I, Swear (2025): Why Robert Aramayo Deserves a BAFTA Nomination
Over the past twenty years, it’s often felt like the British film industry has been hanging by a thread. As someone who’s English born and raised, with Scottish descent, it’s been disheartening to see the decline in homegrown stories that feel genuinely British in both spirit and identity. Thankfully, I, Swear has given me hope again. It’s a small, independent British drama that’s been quietly gaining attention among film fans in the UK — and after seeing it, I understand why. The film...
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