Black & Privileged: Volume 1 – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Black & Privileged: Volume 1, may have some campy performances, but it’s message outweighs what may make you divisive.
Black & Privileged: Volume 1, may have some campy performances, but it’s message outweighs what may make you divisive.
Stuber doesn’t have franchise potential, but Kumail Nanjiani and Dave Bautista have enough chemistry to make it a good one-time collaboration.
Cop Craft drops you right in, with just enough to know what is going on, and that might be the best and worst part of the pilot.
Season 3 feels like the peak for Stranger Things, and from here, it can either plateau or go downhill.
Spiderman: Far From Home feels like a shakeup to the MCU formula for its individual movies, and creates an awesome transition film for the next MCU phase.
While The Rook seems like it could be intriguing, it faces an uphill battle by being everything we’re not used to when superheroes are involved.
The Rising of the Shield Hero, despite early on potential, mostly thanks to its tone of drama, loses quite a bit of luster by its last episode.
Featuring Trinkets star Brianna Hildebrand, Momster seems less like a short and more like an extended clip from a finished movie – in a good way.
Anna, while above your generic Russian spy movie, seems like a direct to VoD release that somehow ended up in theaters.
Murder Mystery is probably the best Adam Sandler comedy in years, at least in terms of story.
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.