Mother’s Day (2023) – Movie Review and Summary (with Spoilers)
While “Mother’s Day” has a big personality character and decent action scenes, it lacks the emotion, adventure, or drive necessary to keep it from becoming background noise.
In this tag, you’ll find all the productions which were available on Netflix’s platform when they originally premiered.
While “Mother’s Day” has a big personality character and decent action scenes, it lacks the emotion, adventure, or drive necessary to keep it from becoming background noise.
Netflix and Jennifer Lopez’ “The Mother” is an intriguing drama suffocated by a bad action movie.
Beef is fun, frustrating, and always fascinating due to raw performances from Steven Yeun and Ali Wong.
“Hunger” might be a wonderful lesson about the cooking industry, but it doesn’t tap as deeply into its underdog story as it could have.
“My Name Is Mo’Nique” sometimes feels less like a comedy special and more like a one woman show, allowing you to laugh with Mo’Nique and cry with her.
Agent Elvis is an alt-history, bloody, juvenile tribute to the King. How much you like may depend on your love of Elvis and poop jokes.
Beyond airing out his feelings about Will Smith, Chris Rock reminds you why he is one of the most revered comedians in comedy.
“The Strays” is a weird film that could have been about more, but in its pursuit of sensationalism, any points about society that could be made are lost.
“Your Place Or Mine” shows the beauty of a relationship being built on friendship, even if the friendship exists due to cowardice.
“JUNG-E” is the same kind of surprise that “Squid Games” was, but with a lower time commitment.
As a young woman finds her life spiraling, she latches onto her estranged aunt, who might be the person she needs to navigate the next chapter of her life.
It’s five days before the heist when the episode starts, and while Roger gets one lucky break, Leo gets lucky.
Episode “Green” covers Stan and Leo’s relationship and his motive for wanting to create the heist.
In episode “Yellow,” Leo builds his extended team since he knows his main partner in a $7 billion heist is now in position.
A cast and character guide for Netflix’s “Kaleidoscope,” with character descriptions, quotes, names of actors, and more.
Between movies and shorts, Wherever I Look covered over 230 productions in 2022, and here are our picks for what was the best of the year.
Twists, betrayals, a huge gunfight, and an ending that may make you teary-eyed caps off the end of “The Recruit” season 1.
The origins of Hannah and Owen’s relationship are finally revealed as a new, deadly character is introduced.
Owen finds himself in Janus panic attack territory as he and Max are tasked with a polygraph test, and Max threatens him if she fails.
“Leverage” continues to be the most dangerous word on “The Recruit” as Max returns to a power player position and takes full advantage of it.
As a new problem comes between Max and her freedom, Owen struggles to keep everyone happy and maybe experience some joy for himself.
In this episode, we get the backstory of why Max ended up in jail, alongside Lester and Violet’s relationship.
A character guide for Netflix’s “The Recruit,” with character descriptions, quotes, names of actors, and more.
As Owen shows he only needs to make one mistake to catch on, things escalate, and he finds himself dealing with assassins in Vienna.
The first week of a new job for anyone can be rough as you adjust to the people and expectations. But for Owen, who just started in the C.I.A., within days, he gets tortured.
While Jenna Ortega makes a superb Wednesday, unfortunately, they put her in a world reminiscent of the “Chilling Adventures of Sabrina” with boy drama and a mediocre mystery.
Can Wednesday right wrongs, and someone not die in the process? Find out in the finale of “Wednesday.”
Uncle Festers comes to Jericho, and alongside that, Wednesday believes she has cracked the case, allowing her to move certain things, or people, up in priority.
It’s Wednesday’s 16th birthday, and while everyone is trying to celebrate her, she exploits them for the sake of her investigation.
It’s Parents Weekend at Nevermore, which means Gomez and Morticia visiting, among other parents, and old beefs being addressed.
At the Rave’n dance, Bianca and Xavier open up to Wednesday unexpectedly, as one beloved character is pranked and another possibly killed.
“Blood Sex and Royalty” pursues edutainment with CW-type casting and performances mixed with actual historians to note the historical context.
As we come to learn about the efforts Principal Weebs has made to integrate, or assimilate, the children into Jericho, Wednesday learns about its founder’s connection to her family.
As Wednesday slowly opens up, she finds joy in the secrets and competition Nevermore offers.
Masterful storyteller Trevor Noah brings the quality expected with notable accents, trying to bring a different perspective to pop culture and your usual COVID jokes.
“In Her Hands” is a draining, in the best way, documentary to watch as you come to understand how imperialism affects those subjugated.
“Christmas With You,” like most Christmas movies, is just different enough to stand out thanks to embracing parts of Latin American culture.
“Deon Cole: Charleen’s Boy” strings along a bunch of jokes regarding aging and loneliness and then hits on something personal.
While the romance between the two leads is notable, the hijinks the character Bisi, played by Bisola Aiyeola goes through and exhibits, steals “Dinner at My Place.”
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.
Pages