You: Season 2 – Review
The second season of “You” feels a bit formulaic, but Penn Badgley makes up for it by continuing to make you wonder how far Joe can go before he’s unforgivable?
The second season of “You” feels a bit formulaic, but Penn Badgley makes up for it by continuing to make you wonder how far Joe can go before he’s unforgivable?
From a mini-series about Madam C.J. Walker to Tyler Perry and Willem Dafoe’s latest films, this is The Weekend Rundown.
“Ana” is a cute movie that further proves Dafne Keen, of “Logan” and “His Dark Materials” fame, is likely to be first billing for decades to come.
In “The Planet Is Burning,” Ilana Glazer speaks to her people and her core audience. If that isn’t you, I can’t necessarily say she’ll win you over.
What is more interesting? Meeting Julian and Dorothy’s father or a follow up to what Julian saw the night Jericho died?
It’s Act One of “High School Musical,” and while there are stumbles, it was all going good – until unexpected guests show up.
Like “Rings,” the “SaW” remake, and so many other horror franchises that reboots were attempted for, “The Grudge” seems like it shouldn’t have been made.
“Party of Five” hones in on the immigration crisis and reminds you of the damage separating families will have and may bring you to tears.
As junior year begins, Alexa & Katie find college casting a dark cloud over their lives and friendship.
Chris and Miranda open up, and a new catfish joins “The Circle.”
It’s time for another elimination and people getting to ask anonymous questions, some reveal more than others to stay in the running.
As we await a new member making themselves known, those who survived the first round get to reveal another side to themselves.
We collected many quotes and made a few .gifs this month, check them out.
A show/ character guide for Netflix’s The Circle featuring who plays who, character descriptions, storylines, and general information.
Taking a nod from social media, “The Circle” makes it so only a profile and chatbox allows you to influence your peers to win $100,000.
Within 19 minutes, you get a real and raw taste of who Ms. Pat is, and she makes it clear her story can’t be surmised in a short set.
As Addy continues to distance herself from Beth, she finds herself drawn closer and closer into Coach French’s orbit and being privy to her secrets.
While Joe isn’t the luckiest nor smartest, he is adaptable. Hence him making the best of multiple bad situations.
Many questions are answered: Why is Ellie with Delilah, what happened with Joe’s parents, and the big one – Was it Joe who did what was discovered in episode 8?
What happens when you put an insecure psychopath on LSD? Well, we get an idea after Forty drugs Joe.
Joe struggles to deal with moving on from Love, but between Gabe and Delilah, there was hope.
A private investigator is put on Candace by Love, and this leads to her scrambling so that she can get her revenge.
Between Candace’s arrival, meeting Love’s parents, and trying to maintain this idea he can be better, will Joe snap once again?
“Always A Bridesmaid” is everything you could want and more from a romance film.
The second part to Ready To Love: Season 2’s reunion special has just as much drama, if not more, thanks to Christina asking the real questions.
The past, both in terms of his actions and people, continue to haunt Joe’s future as he tries to be who he wants Love to see him as.
Joe begins to get a bit more involved in Ellie’s life, despite being warned not to, and Forty, Love’s twin brother, he latches onto Joe so that he can become his new crutch.
The person who introduced Dorothy to the transition doll is properly met, and she may just blow everything up.
With a second season confirmed, the season 1 finale of “The Mandalorian” reveals not just Mando’s real name and story, but where his journey is destined to go.
Everything that could go wrong seems to, and so many characters look towards the past while dealing with an uncertain future.
Somehow an hour and 19-minute film feels so much longer by means that is hard to explain, but we’re going to try.
Joe is struggling with not being who he is, but he acknowledges it, Delilah sees it, and poor Love romanticizes it.
New year new Joe, right? Well, with a new network and new location, it seems Joe, now Will, proves old habits die hard.
Spies In Disguise may come off like a kid’s movie, but luckily it remembers who is the person paying for the tickets.
For those who are fans of the Viziepop demon motif, something a bit more child-friendly is released – if your children are into monsters.
Greta Gerwig, Saoirse Ronan, and Timothée Chalamet prove themselves to be a formidable trio and a grouping we should expect for decades to come.
His Dark Materials, while wonderfully led by Dafne Keen, of Logan fame, struggles with weak reveals and lack of urgency.
It really is a shame A Rainy Day In New York will struggle to find distribution in the US. For while not Allen’s best work, it is still entertaining.
The end of season 1 is but a bridge to season 2, and thus season 1 feels almost incomplete in execution.
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.
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