Velvet Buzzsaw – Summary/ Review (with Spoilers)
Velvet Buzzsaw barely lives up to the expectations of what you expect from a horror, lacks the urgency of a thriller, and is mostly just posh art world drama.
With car chases, life or death moments, and usually someone driven to madness, the Thriller tag has productions featuring these kinds of thrills.
Velvet Buzzsaw barely lives up to the expectations of what you expect from a horror, lacks the urgency of a thriller, and is mostly just posh art world drama.
Between Miss Bala being curbed to PG-13, and lacking shades of grey, while entertaining, it isn’t necessarily a must see.
Animas’ teen drama and psychological aspects, when combined, neither provides a quality thriller nor horror.
An Acceptable Loss builds upon the patriotism of movies released in the past and questions what is justifiable so Americans can feel safe?
While Bird Box certainly contains some emotional high points, it overstays its welcome.
While Escape Room inspires memories of SaW, it accomplishes much of what SaW originally did while being PG-13.
What begins as a lonely, unwell girl getting her deserved comeuppance, turns into a borderline ridiculous revenge plot.
What starts off as a potentially cute love story, featuring a madman, devolves into you begging for one man to shut up.
During a high school reunion of sorts, a group of jocks, after one crazy night, assume one of them killed another. Question is: Who and why?
While the bleeping of curse words may annoy you, everything else will fascinate you to the point of being tempted to get the book to spoil what’s to 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.