Sweetheart (2019) – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Sweetheart reminds you: Believe Black women, don’t test Black women, and support Black women.
Discover our top picks and latest reviews spanning from blockbuster hits to indie films, shorts, and festival premieres across various platforms.
Sweetheart reminds you: Believe Black women, don’t test Black women, and support Black women.
In The Thin Orange Line, we’re reminded how much a person’s childhood innocence still guides them when they are an adult.
While it doesn’t dive too much into the argument against school choice, Miss Virginia does help you understand why many are for it.
Eli presents the unexpected, time and time again, to the point it will make you wish this was a mini-series, maybe of 2 – 3 episodes, than one movie.
Maleficent, once more, pushes you to wonder why doesn’t Disney reinvent its villains rather than lazily remake its classics?
Christmas is coming early, and neverminding Halloween and Thanksgiving, with this cute film that surprisingly isn’t a Netflix release.
Between characters you may not care to invest in and a plot which would require you to be in a theater to keep your attention, Fractured is a miss.
Little Monsters surprisingly will make you emotional, laugh, and sometimes believe one of the kids will probably get eaten by a zombie.
While as campy as an Adams Family movie should be, in trying to be modern and hip, this entry performs an exorcism on the spirit of the franchise
Jexi, while hilarious, may also make you want to set up boundaries with your AI assistant. Just as a precaution.
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.