His Dark Materials: Season 2 – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
While the men of His Dark Materials are borderline liabilities to the show’s greatness, the women, more than enough, make up for what nearly every male character lacks.
Season or series reviews of shows, summarizing all you need to know in one post.
While the men of His Dark Materials are borderline liabilities to the show’s greatness, the women, more than enough, make up for what nearly every male character lacks.
“In Search of the Sanderson Sisters” is truly a labor of love with moments that remind you why Bette Midler is often associated with being camp.
“Lovecraft Country” continues the burgeoning tradition of, within the fantasy/horror genre, embedding Black stories to bring America’s shameful history back to life.
While “Raised By Wolves” starts off with so much promise, by the end of season 1, nearly every bit of its potential is lost.
“Welcome To Buteaupia” will remind you of when comedians got hour-long specials because it was time, and they deserved it, rather than a network just needing content.
While “Rent A Girlfriend” began with the possibility of being more than another male fantasy anime, it shifts to being what was expected.
While P-Valley takes a while to get its groove, and has misplaced focus with its characters, by the end you’re hooked.
As The Chi continues to prune and grow, you can see it is fearless as it pursues avoiding routine and stagnancy.
The first half of Lucifer’s 5th season reminds you how procedural storylines impede greater development of characters, no matter what the show.
In the final season of Trinkets you can see there was so much left to cover, but the writers salvaged what plans they could.
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.