Millennial Hunter (2023) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
As long as you are just looking for a Boomer to kill some millennials, you have come to the right place. If you want more than just that, this may feel too barebones.
As long as you are just looking for a Boomer to kill some millennials, you have come to the right place. If you want more than just that, this may feel too barebones.
While “Mad Fate” is bizarre and makes an effort to keep up a high level of energy as you are led to wonder when, or if, its lead may snap and kill again, after a certain point, it becomes a bore.
A mother starting over after a divorce finds herself enamored by a young girl with a heartening story who is homeless. Thus she takes her in and finds a renewed energy in her household.
Lynn Whitfield makes her debut on “The Chi” and with her influence, we may lose one of the tenured characters on the show.
Tommy decides to throw a curveball of a double elimination! Can you guess which two men are told they are not “Ready To Love?”
“Gran Turismo” is a well-told but predictable underdog story that coasts to the finish line.
Sawada and Sakura get some notable focus as we peer into their lives – from what makes Sakura’s life joyful to what makes Sawada’s life hard.
Shizuka and Akira meet again, but will this time be friendlier than the last?
Rudy continues to grow closer to Fitz, to the point of questioning his sexuality, and he ends up in a slave market in this episode.
Delving into a whirlwind of espionage, emotional revelations, and confronting the shadows of the drug market, this episode masterfully intertwines the fates of its characters, offering both thrill and poignant introspection.