Fleabag: Season 2 – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Season 2 of Fleabag presents us a character who hit rock bottom and it trying to find her way back to the light despite her past.
Season 2 of Fleabag presents us a character who hit rock bottom and it trying to find her way back to the light despite her past.
The WTF Shorts at Tribeca 2019 all live up to the collection’s title, but not all for the same reason.
Zoey Deutch kills it as Peg and leads you to question why doesn’t Buffaloed have a distribution deal yet? Particularly with Netflix.
In a strange twist, Rogen ups his game to what you’d expect from Theron, and while he maintains his comedic style, he also veers towards being a more serious actor.
Is a movie about a reclusive writer, with limited social skills, and a young woman, with limited life skills worth seeing? Read our review to know.
Bonding starts off very weird, and potentially niche, but it has the potential to break out of that.
One of two things comes from Someone Great: Wanting to call your best friends and say you love them, or wishing you have best friends you could call.
Thriller works better as a comedy than anything remotely close to a horror, and as long as you come in knowing that you should be fine.
While reimagining classic films usually deserve a side-eye, Little brings something completely new and leaves you feeling like it is long overdue.
Season 2 of On My Block loses a bit of the luster the first season had but remains a loveable staple of the Netflix library.
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.
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.