Mr. Blake At Your Service (2025) Movie Review & Summary
John Malkovich delivers a feel-good movie in Mr. Blake At Your Service, about a widow looking to reconnect with his wife through the place they fell in love.
John Malkovich delivers a feel-good movie in Mr. Blake At Your Service, about a widow looking to reconnect with his wife through the place they fell in love.
A Second Life, through the gentle performances of Agathe Rousselle and Alex Lawther, may cause the type of tears that don’t come like a gut punch but from feeling allowed and safe to do so.
“Cabo Negro” gives you a slice of life take on being queer and Muslim, but it may not have what many need to want to watch the full film.
“Young Hearts” delivers the type of innocent, first love you rarely see since most LBTQ+ romances are about kids well into their teens who see the pinnacle of any potential relationship as having sex.
“Humanist Vampire Seeking Consenting Suicidal Person” uses people’s love for vampires as a hook, but maintains your attention through its sweet, comical, and awkward characters.
A cast and character guide to Igor Gotesman Pierre Niney’s “Fiasco.”
As a mutations cause some of humanity to turn into animals, we watch as one family deals with the government’s response.
In a tragic, long-in-the-tooth, multi-generational love story, two people have a constant case of bad timing, which ruins the love that could be.
A mother starting over after a divorce finds herself enamored by a young girl with a heartening story who is homeless. Thus she takes her in and finds a renewed energy in her household.
“Passages,” on the surface, can seem like a narcissistic man trying to have his cake and eat it too, but the deeper it goes, the more you see how relationships were long troubles before social media and app dating.
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.