Love, Death & Robots: Suits – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Cartoon graphics mix with life or death situations creating moments that make you hold your breath in Suits.
Films in this category aren’t full-length, an hour or more, movies, but shorts.
Cartoon graphics mix with life or death situations creating moments that make you hold your breath in Suits.
In The Witness, we get what feels like a pitch to a much more complicated movie.
Three Robots is a quirky short which ends just before it could perhaps go left and overstay its welcome.
Sonnie’s Edge, thanks to its protagonist, the monster fights, and what background we get, makes you clamor for more.
When I’ve Wanted To Die, feels like a visual summary, with an incremental update, of Anna Akana’s book released last year.
In the civil rights era, and before, it is easy to forget it was more than a Black and white issue. There were also those who didn’t fit in either box. June gives a glimpse of their story.
In this short, a young woman toils over the idea of getting back with an abusive fiancé.
The Last Goodbye spends its runtime wisely to make sure its ending packs a punch.
Retrospect may mess you up a little as you watch a young man do anything to reconnect with his ex again.
Tamala cuts up what seems to be the big moments of a larger movie, into an 11 minute short.
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.