Everything Beautiful Is Far Away – Summary/ Review (with Spoilers)
At best, Everything Beautiful Is Far Away is about opening up to the unknown. At worse, it is a 90-minute movie in which not a lot happens.
At best, Everything Beautiful Is Far Away is about opening up to the unknown. At worse, it is a 90-minute movie in which not a lot happens.
The mid-season finale is all about building anticipation as people die left and right and you wonder, will a main cast member be written off?
It’s a (mostly) Elena focused episode and we get to see her reach a personal high, and low. Meanwhile, Lila deals with Marcello’s advances.
Eve is back and it’s not just to Mary Poppins another girl’s life but also to keep from being discontinued!
Jada’s father, Robsol Pinkett, Jr., is discussed in terms of the issues he left his children, as well as the lessons he bestowed them.
As Veronica digs deeper and deeper into John’s past, Debra tries to maintain blissful ignorance as long as she can.
Lila and Elena continue to take diverging paths and Elena may have finally reached a point of breaking away and getting ahead.
Thanks to the dynamic between Trey Songz and Jack Kesy, you get a surprisingly good action movie.
As the numbers dwindle, and Melinda doesn’t become the sole woman to eliminate herself, there is a need to question if anyone may find love?
Why the Sword-Maiden has been acting so weird is revealed to us as well as the purpose of that mirror.
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.