Jet Trash – Recap/ Review (with Spoilers)
Jet Trash is the kind of film where you feel like, if they just dialed it back a bit, it could have been much more satisfying.
Jet Trash is the kind of film where you feel like, if they just dialed it back a bit, it could have been much more satisfying.
The Innocents begins with you asking a whole lot of questions, with just enough intrigue to continue onto the next episode.
The Last Goodbye spends its runtime wisely to make sure its ending packs a punch.
Retrospect may mess you up a little as you watch a young man do anything to reconnect with his ex again.
Strip away the sexual aside of having a threesome and focus on the awkwardness which comes before, during, and after, and you got Threesomething.
To All The Boys I’ve Loved Before will make you cry, laugh, and reminisce about the first time you found someone you connected with like no one else.
Elizabeth Harvest likely will play out how you expect it to, but it doesn’t make it any less entertaining to watch.
Crazy Rich Asians may have one of the dullest romances you have ever watched, but Awkwafina and Nico Santos save this film from being a bore.
Flavors of Youth presents 3 stories which present the minimal needed for you to not close out your Netflix tab.
Outside of two moments in which the lead is sexually assaulted, and the protagonist being Black, The Darkest Minds is as generic as they come.
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.