We Are Who We Are: Season 1/ Episode 5 “Right Here, Right Now 5” – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
As Caitlin takes a major step to defining her identity, a storm is brewing between Richard and Sarah, with their spouses playing notable roles.
Amari is the founder and head writer of Wherever-I-Look.com and has been reviewing media since 2010. He approaches each production with hope, rooting for every story to succeed, and believes criticism should come from unmet potential, while praise is reserved for work that meets or exceeds expectations.
As Caitlin takes a major step to defining her identity, a storm is brewing between Richard and Sarah, with their spouses playing notable roles.
Like the dying process, “Ms. White Light” has its good moments and bad moments, but ultimately ends with a whisper.
In a partly Montrose focused episode, we head back to 1921 Tulsa to rescue the Book of Names from the destruction of Tulsa.
“Walk Away From Love,” strangely, avoids some of the usual tropes you’d expect, but whether that makes it better or not? Well, read on.
In a first for the series, the focus is squarely on one couple, Felicia and Karega Bailey, and the topic is their relationship and the loss of their daughter.
While there is some ecchi for those who need it, largely “Adachi and Shimamura” keeps things cute, with a dash of complicat
“Charm City Kings,” like so many urban dramas, shows the many rare paths it could take but ends up on the well-trodden road.
For years “The War With Grandpa” has seen its release date changed so, does that mean it’s a bad film? Read on.
In the season finale, we finally learn who is making heads explode, two notable people die, and another is eliminated from the show – for now.
“Vampires vs. The Bronx” lovingly expands the horror genre, with its charming cast but misses key opportunities to leave a mark.