The Chi: Season 2 – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Season 2 of The Chi, despite issues caused by Jason Mitchell, retains the vibe of being a high-brow urban drama which balances both the dark and beauty of an urban area.
The human experience, sometimes at its most raw, is what you’ll find in the drama tag.
Season 2 of The Chi, despite issues caused by Jason Mitchell, retains the vibe of being a high-brow urban drama which balances both the dark and beauty of an urban area.
Point blank: There is little to nothing freaky about Kinky and it doesn’t compensate being a soft R with its characters or storyline.
Beats is the kind of film which has a good central story, but the bankable star gets in the way of said story shining as it could and should.
While a bit slow, and definitely having a strong indie vibe, Fast Colors eventually hooks you into its supernatural story.
In trying to be a light drama, Trinkets avoids addressing what’s human about its characters and barely takes us beyond the surface.
I want you to imagine the graphic nature of 13 Reasons Why and the realness of Skins (UK) turned up but with better performances, better characters, and more explicit scenes.
From what it appears, this book adaptation could become one of Netflix’s newest YA hits – if it plays its cards right.
Just in time for Pride, we get a large ensemble cast depicting nearly every bit of the rainbow from orientation, gender identity, and also ethnicity.
Oh, Ramona! has a mini-series vibe which makes the movie, while enjoyable, feel long.
Ma definitely pushes the idea we need more Black horror villains, but ones with villains who have better, or a less inundated, backstory.

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.