Pinch (Tribeca 2025) Film Review & Summary
Pinch explores the continued struggles women face in being believed when men, often assumed to be the good ones, behave badly.
The human experience, sometimes at its most raw, is what you’ll find in the drama tag.
Pinch explores the continued struggles women face in being believed when men, often assumed to be the good ones, behave badly.
Bird in Hand presents several opportunities for meaningful conversations, but often sidesteps them—without quite offering enough humor to make up for what’s missing.
Rosemead goes beyond giving Lucy Liu a rarefied role and highlights mental health in the Asian community as rarely seen.
A Second Life, through the gentle performances of Agathe Rousselle and Alex Lawther, may cause the type of tears that don’t come like a gut punch but from feeling allowed and safe to do so.
Cuerpo Celeste challenges viewers immensely as it hooks you in with the sense of community it presents, and then forces you to yearn and mourn what it initially sold you on.
The Travel Companion travels light in regards to giving you something, or someone, you’ll actively want to invest in for an hour and a half.
Lemonade Blessing provides a different kind of coming-of-age film, especially with the inclusion of faith, as it shows the conflict in ways that don’t feel sensationalized.
Trophy Boys honors the chaos which comes from male youth as it both challenges and embraces the patriarchy.
Lost In Starlight, as its leads work through their personal anxiety and trauma, reminds you what finding “The One” looks like.
Dying For Sex creates an almost perfect mini-series that can inspire, make you cry, and potentially have you feel seen.
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.