LOVE DEATH + ROBOTS: Three Robots – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Three Robots is a quirky short which ends just before it could perhaps go left and overstay its welcome.
Three Robots is a quirky short which ends just before it could perhaps go left and overstay its welcome.
While diversity has come in the form of different skin tones, ethnicities and sexualities coming to the forefront, Shrill breaks ground.
Juanita is the type of role and movie you’ll wish Alfre Woodard and her peers got to experience far more often.
Captain Marvel nods towards being the first female-led Marvel movie, but other than that, it’s what fans of the MCU are long used to for better and worse.
Madea’s final bow may be a slight disappointment, but the laughs will remind you of why you fell in love with the character.
The Umbrella Academy’s first season is a bit hit and miss, but by the final, it seems to have found its footing.
This modernized version of Kim Possible could grow on you, but many of the jokes, and changes, including Kim being made insecure, may turn off older fans.
Isn’t It Romantic is not only comical but finds an appropriate way to address what it is like to be a woman who is plus sized without making her the joke.
Happy Death Day 2U may feel like an unnecessary sequel, but it is nevertheless a fun time.
Kevin Hart’s Guide To Black History feels like a potentially classic edu-tainment program like what used to come out steadily in the 90s and early 00s.
Miracle Workers seems like the grand example of why more shows should become limited series – and we mean that in a good way.
The Unicorn, in many ways, is like your first time. Awkward, slightly comical, but unlike many people’s first times, it lasts a bit too long.
What Men Want may be a reimagining of What Women Want, but Taraji P. Henson not only makes the movie premise her own but brings a truly hilarious experience.
Likely, by the end of Then Came You, you’ll be crying from both eyes, have snot on your upper lip, and will have a trembling lip.
Russian Doll is for those who like NY/LA indie comedies and wished those kinds of characters got to be in their own TV show.
Fighting With My Family is touching, hilarious, and has the kind of journey we’ve only gotten to enjoy in boxing films for the last few years.
When Polar tries to be funny, it veers towards being a horrible movie. However, when it is harnessing the seriousness of Mikkelsen’s persona, it flourishes
Lady-Like has the vibe of a web series and it being a movie is ultimately upsetting for you are left wanting more.
While compared to The End of The F***ing World, Wayne proves itself to be more than a distant, working class, American cousin.
Wayne may very well be the first show that makes you want to have YouTube Premium.
The Last Laugh is an acute reminder that getting older doesn’t mean you lose your will to live but more so take the idea of living more seriously.
High energy, ridiculous, yet also playing out the anxiety and power dynamics of love, Kaguya-Sama: Love Is War is one of the best romance shows you will see.
Sex Education takes on the idea of being a teen sex comedy in ways you, surprisingly, may not have seen before.
Kevin Hart continues to wade slowly into the drama genre and while maintaining growth in that area, he doesn’t abandon what made him famous in the first place.
Like A Dog’s Purpose, A Dog’s Way Home is touching and will make those like or love animals weep.
Bad Seeds (Mauvaises Herbes) is a feel-good movie which, at its heart, focuses on a relationship which may get you teary-eyed.
In this dark romantic comedy, a man on the edge finds himself pulled back by this person who nearly was his adopted sister.
The story of a Queen’s decline and two cousins who take part in a game, a fight for favor, with dire consequences.
Second Act is a touching story which is an ode to not just hard working women, but those who weren’t afforded the opportunity to go to college.
Mary Poppins Returns may not have the same magic of the original, but every bit of effort is made to escape its shadow. Such as a highly sarcastic Mary Poppins.
While Escape Room inspires memories of SaW, it accomplishes much of what SaW originally did while being PG-13.
Spider-man: Into the Spider-Verse pushes you to learn more about the iconic character, beyond Peter Parker, and creates a franchise you’ll want to see more of.
Dumplin’ is an ode to Dolly Parton and an example of how to handle having a full-figured woman as lead without a comedy filter or being overly dramatic.
Eve is back and it’s not just to Mary Poppins another girl’s life but also to keep from being discontinued!
Surprisingly, the most interesting thing about A Christmas Prince: The Royal Wedding isn’t the wedding but an investigation.
Target’s desire to be both a silly comedy and a mystery conflicts in ways which lead it to disappoint both genres.
The Truth About Christmas tries, it tries really hard. But I can’t firmly say it succeeds in everything it was trying to say or do.
Netflix may have produced a Christmas classic with The Christmas Chronicles. The kind you’d watch with your family and/or friends for years to come.
Ralph Breaks The Internet may have an excellent example of toxic behavior for a conversation starter, but outside of that it feels like a parade its leads get lost in.
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.