Ozark: Season 4 – Summary/ Review
Ozark’s last season at times feels formulaic, and seemingly recognizing that you can see dramatic decisions were made in an attempt to shake things up.
With car chases, life or death moments, and usually someone driven to madness, the Thriller tag has productions featuring these kinds of thrills.
Ozark’s last season at times feels formulaic, and seemingly recognizing that you can see dramatic decisions were made in an attempt to shake things up.
With a nearly perfect balance of comedy, action, and emotional moments, Spy x Family is more than meets the eye.
Utilizing its small cast, No Exit is an often intense film to watch, which leaves you to wonder who may make it out alive.
Student Body is bloody, vulgar, and ridiculous. But whether or not it is in the best way? That’s hard to say.
Kimi is a meek thriller that doesn’t fully tap into the role of listening devices or the people who troubleshoot the AI behind them.
Single Black Female delivers on the story, performances and madness you expect.
Aubrey Plaza reminds of her versatility as she takes on a woman desperate to make money and avoid being exploited.
While Scattered is a straightforward thriller, which gives everything away in the trailer, it is nonetheless entertaining.
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.
With the rare 40+ minute pilot, Tokyo 24th Ward seems to want to set a difficult precedent for other anime to follow in 2022.
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.