Eleanor The Great – Review and Summary
Eleanor The Great lives up to its name through June Squibb shouldering both the emotional weight and humor.
Some of the best-seen movies we have ever watched and mentioned to friends, family, and strangers as films that need to be seen.
Eleanor The Great lives up to its name through June Squibb shouldering both the emotional weight and humor.
I’m Your Venus, in focusing on Paris Is Burning star, Venus Pellagatti Xtravaganza, acts as a companion piece to get to know the legendary figure better and gain a three-dimensional version of her story.
Otherlands explores the quiet ache of loneliness and the emotional risk of seeking connection, through a deeply human story about chosen family and unspoken longing.
Happy Birthday is a reminder that child actors can excel without high level trauma or being an accessory to an adult’s performance.
Pinch explores the continued struggles women face in being believed when men, often assumed to be the good ones, behave badly.
A Second Life, through the gentle performances of Agathe Rousselle and Alex Lawther, may cause the type of tears that don’t come like a gut punch but from feeling allowed and safe to do so.
Lost In Starlight, as its leads work through their personal anxiety and trauma, reminds you what finding “The One” looks like.
“Wildflower” starring Kiernan Shipka was released almost two years ago and like many touching films, it was based on a true story. “Wildflower – The Documentary” gives you that true story.
Liquor Bank carries weight as it puts you either in the mindset of the person at the end of their rope, or the person trying to pull their friend up – who is losing grip.
In Mumu, the father-daughter relationship will bring you to tears, as the title character advocates for her deaf father and their community.
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.