Amazon’s Carnival Row: Season 1 – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Season 1 of Carnival Row is ambitious and builds a wonderful world filled with lore, but the majority of its characters fail to really make that world come to life.
Season 1 of Carnival Row is ambitious and builds a wonderful world filled with lore, but the majority of its characters fail to really make that world come to life.
Thanks to the performances of Storm Reid and David Oyelowo, Don’t Let Go will have you crying and your chest tight due to fear.
BEM may not blow you away with its art style or characters, but it does create a world which you may want to see more of
Cop Craft drops you right in, with just enough to know what is going on, and that might be the best and worst part of the pilot.
If It’s for My Daughter, I’d Even Defeat a Demon Lord will likely stir up your emotions and hook you in no time.
Season 3 feels like the peak for Stranger Things, and from here, it can either plateau or go downhill.
Spiderman: Far From Home feels like a shakeup to the MCU formula for its individual movies, and creates an awesome transition film for the next MCU phase.
While The Rook seems like it could be intriguing, it faces an uphill battle by being everything we’re not used to when superheroes are involved.
Yesterday harnesses the nostalgia which comes from listening to The Beatles to deliver a rather awkward, if not one-sided and uncomfortable love story.
While a bit slow, and definitely having a strong indie vibe, Fast Colors eventually hooks you into its supernatural story.