Queen & Slim (2019) – Review, Summary (with Spoilers)
Queen & Slim shows we are truly in a golden age when it comes to media focused on Black lives made by Black people.
Queen & Slim shows we are truly in a golden age when it comes to media focused on Black lives made by Black people.
Anne With An E proves itself to be a rare breed by maintaining its quality over three seasons, while still developing its characters and expanding its cast.
Turkey Drop is fun, dramatic, romantic at times, and one of the few films that doesn’t skip over Thanksgiving.
Carole’s Christmas has a nearly perfect mix of cheesy, but cute, relationships, mixed with the unfortunate realities many people go through.
Vanessa Hudgens further pushes the idea she is the queen of holiday movies as she potentially finds another franchise at Netflix.
Bigger is the kind of streaming service launch title that could convince you to add a new monthly reoccurring bill to your budget.
Let It Snow will certainly warm you up a little bit, but something about it seems very formulaic, and that keeps it from having holiday magic.
Last Christmas, with it addressing the immigrant experience, having a romance which grows on you, and George Michael music? Oh, prep to enjoy yourself.
While Cousins does present the issue of two family members being intimate and a highly annoying character, there is a love there which combats your possible discomfort.
Maleficent, once more, pushes you to wonder why doesn’t Disney reinvent its villains rather than lazily remake its classics?
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.