Queen Sugar: Season 5 – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
Season 5 of Queen Sugar, despite addressing the COVID-19 pandemic and 2020’s Black Lives Matter movement, is a reprieve from what the show has perennially given viewers.
The human experience, sometimes at its most raw, is what you’ll find in the drama tag.
Season 5 of Queen Sugar, despite addressing the COVID-19 pandemic and 2020’s Black Lives Matter movement, is a reprieve from what the show has perennially given viewers.
Remake Our Life! pushes feelings of nostalgia as it allows its protagonist not to think, “What If?” but to choose the other path when they were at a crossroad.
Externo, while at times tapping on that line of being too art-house, presents a compelling journey as one man vies to take over the world.
For what is one of Batman’s legendary stories, Batman: The Long Halloween seemed rather run of the mill.
Zola’s thrill seems a bit lost in translation from a viral Twitter feed to a motion picture.
I hope you’ve been drinking enough water for She Dreams At Sunrise will not only make you cry but ugly cry.
In this sometimes slow-moving sci-fi drama, you’re reminded of what the cost for survival can be in a post-apocalyptic world – and it often is more than you’re willing to give.
In what appears to be one of the final moments of a long movie, we watch as a young woman integrates a room to share a highlight of her life with her people.
Asking For It has a B-Movie vibe as it has a group of radical feminists take on incels and the patriarchy.
Picking up from the story the movie set up, we switch focus to Ashley as she moves in with Miles’ bohemian mother and sex worker sister – and Ashley ain’t happy.
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.