All These Small Moments – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
All These Small Moments gives you a taste of so many great stories and leaves you hungering for more from each one.
The human experience, sometimes at its most raw, is what you’ll find in the drama tag.
All These Small Moments gives you a taste of so many great stories and leaves you hungering for more from each one.
As Adam Sandler seemingly tries to combine his style of comedy with his more appreciated dramatic works, we get the very rough The Week Of.
In a Relationship tones down the dramatics of young love and while the lack of dramatics does make the film eventually feel dull, it also makes it one the most honest depiction you’ve seen in a while.
The Miseducation of Cameron Post excels as a comedy but, at best, is average in terms of its coming of age drama element.
Jellyfish really does push the idea that being a first-time anything should heighten expectations than lower them.
Little Woods may sell you on the idea of a bi-racial sisterhood, but it’s more so about critiquing the American health system vs. what Canada offers and the illegal market the discrepancy creates.
O.G. is a mixture of Oscar bait editing with the realness that comes from having its actor surrounding by real people doing time.
Dude should have been a series – point blank. For between the writing and casting, this just being an hour and a half will make you feel cheated.
Depending on whether you stick to what is presented on the surface, or go deeper, that will ultimately decide whether you allow yourself to enjoy The Misandrist.
Considering the times we are in, if I was still in middle school or high school, I’d skip every assembly after watching this movie.
A Quiet Place is not your mainstream horror movie and with that comes plus and minuses depending on how you like your horror.
6 Balloons may not become your favorite movie, but it will help you see Dave Franco and Abbi Jacobson in a new light.
I Feel Pretty is the follow-up to Trainwreck people were waiting for out of Amy Schumer.
Daughter provides a bit of social commentary when it comes to respectability politics and whether women set themselves up to be raped or killed.
Over the course of a weekend, two people, both dealing with issues that ruined past relationships, go through every stage of love in a brilliantly weird and comical way.
While Zoe Kravitz remains a draw, this film may feel like a bait and switch if you are getting a ticket to see her.
While Summer: The Donna Summer Musical has a bit of an odd timeline for its narrative, it reminds you that the queen of disco’s reign has yet to end.
In a complicated father/ daughter relationship, the one thing the dad needs from his daughter and could bring them together could potentially ruin her future.
While still containing Tyler Perry’s campy style, his experiment with the thriller genre may lead those who haven’t written him off to be impressed.
Roxanne Roxanne is a story which needed to be told, but there might be some who wished it was told better.
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.