The Royal Hotel (2023) – Review and Summary
“The Royal Hotel” pushes you to asks questions, especially regarding perception, over be entertained.
“The Royal Hotel” pushes you to asks questions, especially regarding perception, over be entertained.
As in previous seasons, Ozark may show Marty as the lead, but in reality, it is the women of the show who make it what it is.
A character and show guide for Netflix’s Ozark featuring cast members, character descriptions, and other noteworthy information.
While “The Assistant” may seem like it wants to play upon the multiple #MeToo scandals, it sidesteps sensationalism in its approach.
A show/ character guide for Netflix’s Inventing Anna featuring who plays who, character descriptions, storylines, and general information.
Dirty John fits what most would describe as a guilty pleasure for there will be times you hate-watch it just to see how it ends.
At best, Everything Beautiful Is Far Away is about opening up to the unknown. At worse, it is a 90-minute movie in which not a lot happens.
A cast and character guide for the series Dirty John featuring who plays who, information about each character, and other noteworthy information about the show.
Dirty John ends its first episode definitely hooking you and making you want to spoil the ending with reading the real story.
Maniac ultimately seems like a good book that was adapted into a lopsided production that relied heavily on its female lead as it let its male lead drown.
A focus on Annie helps Maniac rebound from a lackluster premiere. Especially as we learn how and why she got into the trial.
Season 2 of Ozark is a great improvement of the first and it is all thanks to the women, sans Charlotte and Rachel, of the show.
One Percent More Humid lacks investment in its tragedy to the point it makes the survivor’s tears for naught.
Ozark isn’t for everyone. It requires patience to get into and, outside of the character of Ruth, it is hard to guarantee you’ll grow to like it.
Ozark makes a positive turn as Julia Garner shows up, we see these rural people ain’t stupid, and Marty shows he isn’t a complete ass.
The Get Down returns and picks up with the kids becoming local stars but no fame comes without a price. Which, for most of them, is a lack of freedom or access to the ones they care about the most. Thus leaving room for others to make their moves in.
Overview While Grandma might not be worth the travel costs, while it remains in limited release, Tomlin and company still deliver the type of performances worth eventually checking out.
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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