Reasons (2021) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
The voice presented in Reasons pulls you between wanting a full-length movie focused on Mercy’s story and/or a series.
Films in this category aren’t full-length, an hour or more, movies, but shorts.
The voice presented in Reasons pulls you between wanting a full-length movie focused on Mercy’s story and/or a series.
Therapy is the kind of short that just starts getting good when it ends.
Despite a rather interesting premise, The Last Days devolves into a simple poem that acts as a reminder of racial injustice for Black people in the UK.
A chance encounter leads to an unexpected relationship as faith creates an instant bond, but what’s to happen once the fun is over?
More Happiness is a bit strange and doesn’t really venture to demystify itself.
The First Time gives you webcomic-turned short web series vibes, but it is not long enough.
In this three-minute short, we get an innocent and adorable showing of the lengths someone will go through for a crush.
As a young girl comes of age, she finds herself idolizing one of her friend’s older sister.
Be Good hyper focuses on the experience of having an eating disorder while making its character solely a vehicle for the depiction.
Americanized explores that longing for community, especially when you don’t perfectly fit in with any you identify with.
A young girl of Islamic faith has a growing interest in wearing a bikini to her swim meet and decides she isn’t going to ask her mother’s permission.
In this music video, you get a sad, animated story that illuminates the lyrics of Sting’s “Inshallah.”
Someone call Nickelodeon, Disney, some children’s network because they need to make Death & Deathability (A Period Piece) a series – STAT!
Wouldn’t Mean Nuthin’ gives you the vibe Black & Sexy TV gave in the early 2010s.
Apart, Together is a touching story focused on a woman looking for the daughter she was forced to give up.
In The Black Disquisition, a young man recaps the moment his parents had to tell him what it means to be Black, and the journey to find Black to be beautiful
In a town plagued by the closure of a major factory employer, a handful of boys are trying to make money to maintain some sense of normalcy.
Four boys steal their school exam papers and make a business from selling the tests, but how will they deal with karma biting them in the ass?
What does one do when in need of money, and an old friend offers an illegal but easy way to get it? Which would help your family and relationship immensely?
No matter how old you get, change is difficult. However, when it is sprung up on you, is it wrong for you to get mad?
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.