A Christmas Prince: The Royal Baby – Review, Summary (with Spoilers)
The Christmas Prince series continues and remains perhaps one of the best holiday traditions of the modern age.
The Christmas Prince series continues and remains perhaps one of the best holiday traditions of the modern age.
While a tad long, in order to pack in as many twists and turns as possible, Knives Out ultimately is one of the best mystery films you’ve seen in a long time and will see in a long time.
A show/ character guide for USA Network’s Dare Me featuring who plays who, character descriptions, storylines, and general information.
The Boonies is a silly comedy with heart, a taste of mystery, and a diverse mix of drama.
Between characters you may not care to invest in and a plot which would require you to be in a theater to keep your attention, Fractured is a miss.
Season 2 of Elite brings you to question what are the long term plans for this series and whether the characters will make it worth it.
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.
Season 3 of 13 Reasons Why questions whether a serial rapist, and someone who nearly shot up a school, not only deserve to be redeemed but can be.
With a few quality jump scares, and two surprisingly emotional stories, driven by Zoe Margaret Colletti, Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark gives you the expected and a surprise.
Saving Zoe is an emotionally stirring drama which goes beyond finding closure but reconciling with someone you allowed to be distant.
Murder Mystery is probably the best Adam Sandler comedy in years, at least in terms of story.
Good Sam is breezy, likable, avoids any controversial topics, and focuses on an ambitious young reporter trying to find if good people still exist.
I won’t say In The Dark seems like it’ll last past 1 season but, if it does, it has the potential to be a cult classic.
Long Lost will slowly, but surely, make you question what is happening as things for our lead, Seth, go from weird to you verbally saying “What the f***?”
Confessional has a sense of intimacy which allows each character to personally unfurl to you and deepen the mystery and reveal of the truth.
Us, at first, circumvents a lot of what you expect from a horror/thriller. However, after a while, it overstays it’s welcome and its ending? Well…
In The Witness, we get what feels like a pitch to a much more complicated movie.
While a bit of a bargain bin movie, that isn’t to say you may not get a kick out of Only Mine.
While the mystery may not hit as hard as it should, Katherine Waterston makes up for it with a commanding performance.
Black Mirror: Bandersnatch is wonderfully frustrating and will probably lead you to wonder who is truly being controlled? You or Stefan?
Target’s desire to be both a silly comedy and a mystery conflicts in ways which lead it to disappoint both genres.
Dirty John ends its first episode definitely hooking you and making you want to spoil the ending with reading the real story.
Cam, as interesting as it is, leaves one thing out which may make or break the film for you.
Homecoming’s air of mystery may not be a large selling point but, at the very least, the recognizable talent could compensate as the story picks up.
I Still See You presents an interesting murder mystery that will intrigue you more than you might have expected.
The Haunting of Hill House seems to be more about a family’s drama, with horror elements to keep it from getting boring, than a fright fest.
The rich and poor intermingling, the plight of one Palestinian girl, someone HIV+, and boys trying to hide their homosexuality – OH THE DRAMA!
The only reason Maniac presents to continue past episode 1 is your loyalty and faith in the actors. Not their characters or the story.
I want you to imagine the mystery aspect of Gone Girl, mixed with the comedy of Bad Moms. An imperfect union of the two would equal A Simple Favor.
During a high school reunion of sorts, a group of jocks, after one crazy night, assume one of them killed another. Question is: Who and why?
While the first case of Miss Sherlock may not be much of a hook, Yûko Takeuchi as the legendary detective compensates for that.
The Innocents begins with you asking a whole lot of questions, with just enough intrigue to continue onto the next episode.
Down a Dark Hall may contain an interesting, supernatural based, premise, but it leaves you feeling it could have given more.
Elizabeth Harvest likely will play out how you expect it to, but it doesn’t make it any less entertaining to watch.
With only 3 episodes, the foundation is quickly set, alibis given, and a few suspects. Presenting a story which seemingly is following a three act structure with one act per episode.
Sharp Objects, like many an HBO mini-series before, reminds you why the network is the anti-Netflix by focusing on quality over quantity.
A seemingly innocent girl trapped in a building that resembles a multi-level hell, one which may just be impossible to escape alive.
With a rather lukewarm series of mysteries and basic characters, Island may not make any top 10 list for the summer season.
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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