A Wesley Christmas (2022) – Review/ Summary (with Spoilers)
“A Wesley Christmas,” like past BET movies, has an unexpected heart amongst your usual holiday storylines.
“A Wesley Christmas,” like past BET movies, has an unexpected heart amongst your usual holiday storylines.
While there are times when the drama of Tess’ life makes this tedious to watch, by the end of “Dear Zoe,” you’ll nonetheless find yourself potentially in tears.
“Tell Me Lies” may appear to be another young adult drama, but as it explores the interpersonal relationships between the core friend group and some of their families, it breaks away from its peers.
With being story-driven more than character-driven, “House of the Dragon” may seem like it has learned from its predecessor, but in reality, it is simply taking a different approach.
Love blossoms, and apparently in a literal sense for Lily, as a new classmate catches her eye.
Being caught is always the worst nightmare but can it be different when you’re a girl and the person is of the same sex?
While the church is one way to meet people, what about meeting other men when you’re not sure of yourself?
“All I Ever Wanted” reminds you that sometimes, what you desire, has always been there.
“Lucky Fish” gives you the kind of cute moment between two people that can bring on happy tears.
“Stars At Noon” leans on Margaret Qualley as a crutch, to the point of you imagining it bending and damn near breaking by the end of the film.
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.