Good Posture – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Is a movie about a reclusive writer, with limited social skills, and a young woman, with limited life skills worth seeing? Read our review to know.
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.
Is a movie about a reclusive writer, with limited social skills, and a young woman, with limited life skills worth seeing? Read our review to know.
The inevitable happens when it comes to Tiff and Pete’s line of work. Leaving you to wonder, will they survive?
Both Pete and Tiff harness who they are and blur the lines between their alter egos and who they are without the mask. How do you think it went?
Pete and Tiff go on dates, and while both are awkward at first, it seems they found someone who might be willing to work out their kinks.
The best thing about Chambers will be its representation of Native Americans. As for the rest? Well, it may depend on how much you dig the horror genre.
It’s a slice of life episode which largely seems to be self-contained until we realized how integral Mer was for everything that happens.
As Phase 3 comes to an end, both casual and hardcore fans are reminded of the power of the MCU and that this is, in fact, the Endgame.
Both Pete and Tiff decide to make some compromises to bring new people into their life. Also, Tiff shows she probably doesn’t need Pete as a bodyguard.
We dive deeper into Tiff and Pete’s shared past and get to learn why she is so distant.
Some of the awkwardness of episode 1 slips as you realize Pete, while gay, is still Georgia made and Tiff has long left her conservative upbringing behind.