Sorry For Your Loss: Season 1/ Episode 3 “Jackie O. & Courtney Love” – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
As Leigh meets another young widow, and her best friend gets engaged, she finds herself digging more into the blemishes of her marriage.
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 Leigh meets another young widow, and her best friend gets engaged, she finds herself digging more into the blemishes of her marriage.
As some of Matt’s secrets come out, some even Leigh didn’t know, we dive a bit further into the complicated family he was part of.
Thanks to Elizabeth Olsen, the full weight of emotion dealing with losing your spouse, while young, will weigh on you like a sandbag.
The Hate U Give is the type of book which could prevent many from ever having the ability to say, “I don’t like to read.”
A bit dated, and lacking the type of punch you may be expecting, D.L. Hughley: Contrarian has its moments but lacks a reason to be called a classic.
In this post, you’ll find collected quotes from Angie Thomas’ book: The Hate U Give, with page numbers.
As we get a hint of Joe’s ex, he also has to deal with Beck not being a one-dimensional person and not who he thought she was.
Covering the first 17 episodes of the animated series, Bleach feels like a to the point movie cutting the majority of filler, and probably some essential characters.
As Issa continues to show growth, and Lawrence remains a nasty ho, Kelli has a real moment like Tiffany did in the last episode.
White Boy Rick seems to follow a worn out list of what “Based on a True Story” films must do and thus lacks anything to make this feel truly different from the rest.