A Tourist's Guide to Love and Adventure
Amanda Riley gets the opportunity to travel to Vietnam for the experience of a lifetime.



Elemental is a 2023 Disney Pixar movie that is focused on Ember and Wade, two unlikely residents who discover they have much more in common than they realize. We see a strong representative cast, as two diverse actors voice Ember and Wade, the two lead roles. Leah Lewis is an Asian actress who voices Ember. Mamoudou Athie is an African actor who voices Wade. Various People of Color and Women voice supporting roles.
The setting takes place in Element City where the residents are based on the classical elements: air, fire, water, and earth. The characters' names are also based on the elements themselves. Wade is a clue to the water element and Ember is related to the fire element. The plot is about two different residents bonding in a world that says different elements cannot mix together.
The elemental characters are brought to life in their anthropomorphic forms resembling humans, as they have human traits such as facial features and expressions. In addition, the residents wear clothes and stand upright like humans. Since the characters are based on the elements, they also have magical powers and shapeshifting abilities.
Ember and Wade feel that they cannot be together because of their physical appearances and places in the social categorization of Element City. Ember is encouraged to find what she really wants in life, as her dreams should not be interfered with by societal categorization. The two main characters, who are fire and water elements, are based on the concept that fire and water never mix. However, as they interact, both realize that societal categorization is keeping them apart and bond over their biggest desires in life. This conflict is related to people of different ethnicities and racial backgrounds in real life; the societal concept of people of different races being kept apart is emphasized in this Pixar film.

In a city where fire, water, land and air residents live together, a fiery young woman and a go-with-the-flow guy will discover something elemental: how much they have in common.
Amanda Riley gets the opportunity to travel to Vietnam for the experience of a lifetime.
Dramatic Horror!!! Wait, what?? Did you say "dramatic horror"?? IS there such a thing?? I mean, TRULY. Well, if San Francisco-based, Pakistani-born independent filmmaker Dr. Hassan Zee and this film critic have anything to say about it, there IS such a beast as experienced through the director's newest feature film set to officially debut October 4th in the City by the Bay. Folks, indie film will always be a bastion of experimentation and originality, and this film for me fits that bill.
I first saw Dear Evan Hansen on the Broadway stage. Apparently, I was so blown away by the magic of theater that I didn’t pick up on the questionable dynamics. The story's clumsy handling in the movie brought those issues to light.