Mr. and Mrs. Smith: Season 1/ Episode 2 – Episode Recap & Review
Growing increasingly comfortable with one another, Mr. and Mrs. Smith find themselves in an odd position during their latest mission, leading to unexpected intimacy.
Growing increasingly comfortable with one another, Mr. and Mrs. Smith find themselves in an odd position during their latest mission, leading to unexpected intimacy.
While the name is familiar, nothing seems recognizable in this version of “Mr. and Mrs. Smith.”
With overarching themes that demarcate our period as one of isolation; the producers created a show that makes us want to come together to chat about our shortcomings as a social community.
Swarm centers around a quirky super-fan has an extreme obsession with the fictional pop star, Queen Ni’Jah, which leads her down a rocky path of self-discovery and murder.
“Atlanta” ends its run without any desire to conform to the expectations of a final season, as it continues to have a loose arc for its characters.
“Atlanta” ends with the kind of story that has a message but is as wild, bold, and nonsensical as the series has been from the start.
Donald Glover takes advantage of Disney owning FX to present to you the story behind one of the Blackest movies of all time, “The Goofy Movie.”
Can you really be a show that focuses on Atlanta, and Black culture, without bringing up Tyler Perry?
Season 3 of Atlanta is about growth from the main cast and Glover flexing on the strength of Atlanta nearly every other episode.
In the season 3 finale, we learn why Van went to Europe and what she has been doing after disappearing.
After living his life being thankful for being white-passing, a young man has to prove he is Black enough to get a full-ride scholarship.
Al joins Darius on a drug trip that eventually leads to a nice lady telling him to mind the people around him.
A mother’s sacrifice is always noted as a noble thing, but sometimes it depends on what or who is part of that sacrifice.
A beautiful love story mixes in with a political message to create the wonderful Guava Island.
The second season of Atlanta doubles down on the eccentrics of the first and with that comes more inventive stories and the question of what was done purely because Glover and co. had the money to do it?
To help you understand how hard Al’s decision was to let Earn go, we take it back to middle school where Al stuck up for Earn and it had deadly consequences.
It’s a Darius focused episode without commercial interruptions. What’s the worse that could happen right?
“Barbershop” is one of those random Alfred episodes which don’t push the story forward but more so establish the weirdness and randomness of certain character’s everyday life.
Atlanta returns after an extended hiatus and still has that impeccable balance of being weird as hell yet seemingly rooted in reality.
Sony, as Fox hopefully one day will do with the X-Men franchise, has given into the House of Mouse and let their property into the Marvel Cinematic Universe. With that, we finally are given the Spiderman we deserve. Albeit one with the PG-13 humor of most Marvel movies, but this is a Spiderman for a…
Best of It’s interesting in our culture […] our parents are already concerned about us being hurt or irreparably scathed in some way by life so they teach us how to manage and deal with failure, but no one teaches you how to manage and deal with success. – Keegan-Michael Key It’s easy to keep…
Best of [In response to those who say slavery was a long time ago, you need to get over it, etc] This is what I say to those people, ‘To argue that is to say effects don’t matter. To say that effects don’t compound. Everything that happens in the world has an effect. […] So…
If Comedy Central produced original movies, The To Do List would be that awkward first venture.
Overview It’s the birth of a new series and strangely, it’s a dramedy. Which is surprising in a good way for it makes it feel like Atlanta is bridging the gap between the comedy star Donald Glover is known for and the rare, non-soap opera styled depiction of not only Black people but issues which…
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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