Mr. and Mrs. Smith: Season 1/ Episode 2 – Episode Recap & Review
Growing increasingly comfortable with one another, Mr. and Mrs. Smith find themselves in an odd position during their latest mission, leading to unexpected intimacy.
Growing increasingly comfortable with one another, Mr. and Mrs. Smith find themselves in an odd position during their latest mission, leading to unexpected intimacy.
While the name is familiar, nothing seems recognizable in this version of “Mr. and Mrs. Smith.”
“Atlanta” ends its run without any desire to conform to the expectations of a final season, as it continues to have a loose arc for its characters.
“Atlanta” ends with the kind of story that has a message but is as wild, bold, and nonsensical as the series has been from the start.
Alfred takes Soulja Boy’s advice and checks out a farm in the middle of nowhere.
Earn decides to use Lottie’s birthday as a means to pressure Van to come to Los Angeles.
What would you do for a pair of new kicks? Also, how are you a grown-ass man with beef from high school?
Earn’s momma decides she is sick and tired of her sister hogging their daddy, so she kidnaps him.
Season 4, the final season of “Atlanta,” begins with the usual aimless episode that gives you a weird, episodic, slice-of-life story.
Al joins Darius on a drug trip that eventually leads to a nice lady telling him to mind the people around him.
Atlanta switches back to Paperboi’s European tour and has him dealing with a weird dude who might have stolen his phone.
Imagine a world where you could sue the owners of your ancestors for reparations or there were restitution taxes – this is Marshall Johnson’s story.
What happens when you mix the eccentric characters of Atlanta with odd Londoners with money to burn? Utter madness.
We catch up with Earn, Van, Darius, and Alfred as they head into the Netherlands for Paper Boi’s European tour and learn about Zwarte Piet.
Rather than continue the stories of the characters we haven’t seen since mid-2018, we’re reminded of the tragedy of Davonte Hart’s story – but with an Atlanta-style spin.
The show shifts its focus away from Kirsten to explore Miranda’s life before Day Zero, including her relationship with Arthur.
While slow at first, once we’re introduced to Jeevan and his new best friend Kirsten, we get that classic father/ daughter type bond that will likely carry the series.
A beautiful love story mixes in with a political message to create the wonderful Guava Island.
In the season finale, Earn makes the type of moves which will determine his fate with Al, his situation with Van, and will steer Lottie’s life for better or worse.
Earn was once at a high but the downward spiral has begun. One in which it seems he wants to hit the rock bottom of as quick as possible.
Alfred stars in an episode of, “When Keeping It Real Goes Wrong” and might be ready to reevaluate his life, career, and attitude.
It’s a Darius focused episode without commercial interruptions. What’s the worse that could happen right?
What do you do when you get your first big check after being homeless and broke? Well, if you’re Earn, you spend it on dumb things to stunt of course.
In Robbin Season, better beware of being hustled. Even if you think you the one hustling someone else or the system.
Atlanta returns after an extended hiatus and still has that impeccable balance of being weird as hell yet seemingly rooted in reality.
Sea Oak doesn’t seem like it could last more than a few seasons but Glenn Close and company make it seem it’ll be good for at least 3. Creator George Saunders Director(s) Hiro Murai Writer(s) George Saunders Noted Cast Bernie Glenn Close Cole Jack Quaid Min Jane Levy Jade Rae Gray Ma Linda Emond Angela Sarah…
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.
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