Tag Archives: 1990s

The Top 10 Movies (At Least 10 Years Old) I Watched in 2025

With 2025 winding down, it is time for my annual list of the best movies at least a decade old that I watched this past year. Once again, the list is somewhat random and arbitrary, based on the movies I happened to choose to watch (or re-watch) over the course of the past year. The films are sorted into five tiers and listed alphabetically within each tier. (In case you missed it, I made a separate list for the best horror movies I watched in 2025.)

Tier 1: Cinematic Masterpieces

The Conversation (1974) directed by Francis Ford Coppola
I saw this movie years ago when I first started studying screenwriting and decided to watch all the greatest films from history. I remember being blown away by The Conversation at the time, but over the years I had forgotten the plot details, so I had been planning to re-watch it. The recent passing of Gene Hackman propelled me to do so—and I feel the same way as the first time around—that it is an absolute cinematic masterpiece. As the title implies, The Conversation is built entirely around a conversation that Hackman’s character (a surveillance technician) records. A gripping noir plot follows, with twists and turns, but equally fascinating is the psychological study of Hackman’s character, Harry Caul—a lonely man who devotes his life to perfecting his craft of audio surveillance and wiretapping—but as a result, he feels great guilt for the repercussions of what his clients do with his tapes, and he lives in constant paranoia of who might be listening to him.

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Growing Up With the Internet as a Millennial vs Gen-Z

I recently listened to a podcast with Zoomers talking about their experience of growing up with the internet as they came of age. It made me realize how different things were for my generation, the Millennials. Your “coming of age” years are when you transition from childhood into adulthood, roughly from middle school through high school and college. Those years are enormously influential on your development, as the core experiences during that period influence the type of person you will ultimately become for the rest of your life. I came of age during the 1990s and early 2000s, whereas Gen-Z came of age in the 2010s and early 2020s. The year 2005 does not seem that long ago, but in many ways the world then is unrecognizable to the world young people face today—at least online.

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Goosebumps Books and 90s Nostalgia

One of my favorite hobbies is going to used book sales and finding rare gems for low prices. It’s not just about paying less; it is more fun and fulfilling to find books in the wild rather than simply ordering a copy on Amazon. It’s akin to treasure-hunting—you never know what you might find. At one such sale, I acquired a collection of Goosebumps books for $0.25 each.

Written by R.L. Stine in the 1990s, Goosebumps was a series of horror books aimed at kids in the “middle grade” level. Goosebumps books were massively popular bestsellers in the 90s and were adapted into a television show, and the franchise remains popular today, with Stine still writing more books, Hollywood movie adaptations, and a rebooted TV series.

Despite being in the target age range at the time, I never read Goosebumps as a kid—though I was always curious about the books because of their evocative covers. Last year, while working on my re-write of Trick or Zombie Treat (a horror book about kids in the 1990s, very much in the vein of Goosebumps), I was feeling nostalgic for the 90s, the formative decade of my childhood, so I decided to see if the Goosebumps books were worth the hype (or at least worth a quarter).

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90s AIM vs Current Social Media

In the late 1990s, AOL instant messenger (AIM) was the first social network I used, and it is still my favorite form of social media. What was different about AIM is that it was more social, whereas modern social media is more parasocial.

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Best Nonfiction Books I Read in 2024

Man and His Symbols (1968) by Carl G. Jung

I have been wanting to read Jung for a while after hearing so much about his work second-hand through podcasts, blogs, and books. Jung has been highly influential on so many writers, thinkers, and artists I admire—and I can see why. His symbolic and mythological approach to psychology is sorely needed in our overly reductionist materialistic world. This book serves as a great introduction to Jung’s work. It features one chapter by Jung himself while the rest are written by his associates. The book also features lots of images to help illustrate the points about symbols because visual symbols are so powerful. Jung writes about the unconscious and the role of the artist:

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Best New(ish) Movies I Saw in 2024

I released my list of the best horror movies I watched this past year, and the best older movies, now it’s time for my list of the best newer movies (released within the decade) that I watched in 2024. As always, check JustWatch to see where the movies may be currently streaming.

Tier 1: Cinematic Masterpieces

Burning (2018) directed by Lee Chang-dong
I didn’t know anything about this movie beforehand, other than it was South Korean and highly acclaimed. So it was fascinating to watch while having no idea where it would go—because the film goes to some wildly unexpected places by the end. I don’t want to say what it’s about because any spoilers would detract from the viewing experience, but the only film I can remotely compare it to is The Talented Mr. Ripley.

Dream Scenario (2023) Directed by Kristoffer Borgli
In this super surreal movie, some random guy (Nic Cage) starts showing up in people’s dreams around the world. It has a very Charlie Kaufman-esque tone, sort of like a mix between Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind and Being John Malkovich. In fact, Dream Scenario might be better than anything Kaufman himself has done since Eternal Sunshine.

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Trick or Zombie Treat: The Revised 2nd Edition

In September of 2023 I planned to record an audiobook for my horror novel Trick or Zombie Treat (originally published in 2015) to release for Halloween of that year. However, I soon realized recording an audiobook would take much longer than I anticipated. I also realized the book needed some editing. There were a couple of typos, which were easy enough to fix, but there were other issues—not grammatical errors, but the prose just didn’t flow as smoothly as it should have. Correcting that took a bit more time and effort.

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From TRL to TikTok: Millennial Pop Culture vs. Gen-Z

Generation-Z is the first generation to grow up entirely online. For as long as Zoomers can remember, the internet has been ubiquitous and pervasive to daily life through smartphones. As a result, Gen-Z has no consensus culture—no TV shows, movies, or music they all consumed growing up. Everything had fractured into thousands of subcultures on the internet. Each Zoomer is an island. There may be another person who shares all your same niche cultural interests, but you are unlikely to ever randomly meet that person in person. You will only ever “meet” that person online. This fragmentation of culture is not necessarily good or bad. It just is. And it is different from every other generation that came before. 

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Pseudonymity Makes People More Honest

There is a misconception that anonymity on the internet inevitably leads to toxicity. But pre-Facebook and social media, most people on the internet were anonymous. Or more precisely, they were pseudonymous, meaning they used a continuous username and avatar, but that name/image was not tied to their real-life identity. In the 1990s and early 2000s it seemed absurd to reveal your real name/face online. Yet under that pseudonymous internet, on average, people were more honest and cordial than they are today when everyone posts under their real names. Contrary to intuition, there was less toxicity when more people were anonymous.

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