The Accused (2025) Review & Summary
“The Accused” may contain interesting ideas, but it lacks the characters and story to execute them.
With car chases, life or death moments, and usually someone driven to madness, the Thriller tag has productions featuring these kinds of thrills.
“The Accused” may contain interesting ideas, but it lacks the characters and story to execute them.
“Drop” wastes a perfectly good romance for a so-so thriller that has a decent mystery element and backends all the action seen in the trailer.
“The Amateur” may not feel as long as it is, but it is certainly forgettable, despite the names involved.
A mix between taking advantage of how much Ray Nicholson looks like his father and the name recognition of Samara Weaving only to make Alba Baptista the most interesting part of “Borderline.”
“The Woman In The Yard” is a reminder of how our thoughts and feelings, the lies we tell ourselves, often play the villains in our story.
While Jenna Ortega makes the best out of what is offered, a lot of “Death Of A Unicorn” is hit or miss.
“Locked” gives you an idea of what the 1% wishes they could do in reaction to those who, at best, inconvenience them or, at worst, make them feel unsafe.
While there is a certain beauty to “Ash” it maybe questionable if it has the substance you’d want or expect.
“Novocaine” is a reminder that spring is coming and we’re exiting the period where movies aren’t expected to be huge hits, but potentially the biggest of the year – with films like “Novocaine” being a warmup.
“Companion” pushes Sophie Thatcher to the point of showing not only is she the top scream queen out there, but she could conquer the drama genre next.
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.