Port Authortiy (2021) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
In the heart of New York, a Pittsburgh transplant hopes to start a new life living with his half-sister, but when that doesn’t come to pass, he develops a chosen family.
Films that either received a limited release or are released digitally, but not as part of a major streaming distributor.
In the heart of New York, a Pittsburgh transplant hopes to start a new life living with his half-sister, but when that doesn’t come to pass, he develops a chosen family.
In this 30-minute horror story, a young man is caught in the loop of a cop killing him in a multitude of ways.
The Vault may not be competitive in the heist genre, but It does work as something to watch when nothing else is new or on.
Come True is one of those polarizing art house films that have this special something about it, but it can easily be lost if you get distracted.
Little Fish will leave you wondering why all the best romances are constricted by tragedy.
Who of us didn’t want to spend more time with our parents, specifically see what they did when we weren’t around? That’s what Kati gets to do in Bambirak.
An absent father finds himself working the wedding of the daughter he never got to know.
When your father is the epitome of masculinity, what does it say about you if you aren’t a spitting image of that?
Like nearly every well-crafted film about Black oppression in America, Judas and the Messiah will enrage you, tire you out, and make you hope J. Edgar Hoover and his enablers, rot in hell.
The 16 minutes of Jason Park’s BJ’s Mobile Gift Shop will leave you demanding a full-length feature film, featuring Johnnyboy Tellem before 2021 is over.
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.