Adolescence (2018) – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
While it has a bit of a rough patch an hour in, for the most part, Adolescence is a touching drama with a good amount of heart.
The human experience, sometimes at its most raw, is what you’ll find in the drama tag.
While it has a bit of a rough patch an hour in, for the most part, Adolescence is a touching drama with a good amount of heart.
Vs. is a surprisingly speedy drama which comes in, gets you emotional, shocks you with the rhymes the lead actor spits, and sends you on happy and satisfied.
The Bold Type remains a flagship program for FreeForm as it explores mature takes on relationships, continues to develop the ladies, and addresses workplace issues.
While Years and Years starts on a high note, as you grow indifferent over the future the characters go through, it pushes you to realize how complacent you’ve become of your own.
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.