Love, Death & Robots: Sucker of Souls – Summary, Review (with Spoilers)
Sucker of Souls is quite gory and a tad bit comical. However, it is towards the bottom of the Love, Death & Robots ranking.
The films within this tag are Netflix original productions. Meaning, they’ll likely never leave the service and should be available now.
Sucker of Souls is quite gory and a tad bit comical. However, it is towards the bottom of the Love, Death & Robots ranking.
Cartoon graphics mix with life or death situations creating moments that make you hold your breath in Suits.
In The Witness, we get what feels like a pitch to a much more complicated movie.
Sonnie’s Edge, thanks to its protagonist, the monster fights, and what background we get, makes you clamor for more.
Jimmy Carr: The Best of Ultimate Gold Greatest Hits will have you questioning how bad of a person you are for laughing at his offensive material.
Juanita is the type of role and movie you’ll wish Alfre Woodard and her peers got to experience far more often.
You Complete Me, Ho is an autobiographical comedy special noting the highs and lows of comedienne Ken Jeong from being a doctor to Crazy Rich Asians.
Kevin Hart’s Guide To Black History feels like a potentially classic edu-tainment program like what used to come out steadily in the 90s and early 00s.
Velvet Buzzsaw barely lives up to the expectations of what you expect from a horror, lacks the urgency of a thriller, and is mostly just posh art world drama.
One Show Fits All gives you everything and more. You’ll laugh, you’ll cry, hear wonderfully told stories, and will seriously be tempted to see Gabriel Iglesias live.
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.