Double Blind (2024) – Review and Summary
“Double Blind” is an intriguing experiment for viewers, but it wavers between making you a thrilling participant and passive observer.
Due to this movie having a few quirks, of which may work for some and for others be a problem, we believe your enjoyment of this movie will depend on your taste.
“Double Blind” is an intriguing experiment for viewers, but it wavers between making you a thrilling participant and passive observer.
In this campy horror-comedy, a young woman who just immigrated to England, got dumped and, alongside her co-workers, decides to get playful revenge, but things turn deadly.
Andrea Bang stars in “Float,” which puts a dry romance front and center over all the ways this could have been intriguing.
“Played and Betrayed,” featuring “House of the Dragon” actress Savannah Steyn is in line with many of Tubi’s offerings, for better or worse.
Many films claim to be a sex comedy, but “Sex-Positive” truly lives up to its name and title of the subgenre.
While “Upgraded” is predictable and doesn’t pursue standing out, it is enjoyable if you allow it to be.
“Calamity Jane” feels like 90 minutes of people doing cosplay.
Daniel Hoesl and Julia Niemann’s dark satire “Veni Vidi Vici” begins with an extreme premise and no where else to go afterwards.
In a movie that may have more scenes of landscapes and walking than dialog, viewers are pushed to notice the subtle shift in dynamics between a father, daughter, and the father’s odd friend.
Like most Sci-Fi movies void of action or suspense, “Love Me” feels longer than it needs to be, leading to its highlights becoming muddled.
The overall goal of Wherever I Look is to fill in that space between the average fan and critic and advise you on what’s worth experiencing.