Maika (2022) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
Maika is probably one of the most entertaining sci-fi action films, aimed at kids, I have either ever seen.
Maika is probably one of the most entertaining sci-fi action films, aimed at kids, I have either ever seen.
Good Luck to You, Leo Grande acts as a reminder that intimacy and vulnerability go well beyond sex and is really about allowing someone to know you beyond the physical.
Master for PWI may have the same effect that Get Out had on Black man/White woman relationships.
Emergency taps into that innate feeling many Black Americans have about getting involved with certain people who automatically lead to suspicion and the police.
In Stop-Zemlia, it feels like you learn so much yet so little, but considering the constant shifts in friendships and self-image as a teenager, it is almost fitting.
At times confusing, but often disturbing, The Free Fall is a horror movie best watched at night and alone.
See For Me gives you a quality, one-location thriller that forces you to have complicated feelings about the lead, despite them being legally blind.
The voice presented in Reasons pulls you between wanting a full-length movie focused on Mercy’s story and/or a series.
Therapy is the kind of short that just starts getting good when it ends.
The Little Death chronicles the heartbreaking story of one couple trying to get pregnant and the test it presents for their marriage.
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.