Chapter 51 Review: Hollywood Eats Its Own Reflection
A serial-killer case built from IMAX footage and studio gossip should feel like a trapdoor under ...
Read moreDetailsA serial-killer case built from IMAX footage and studio gossip should feel like a trapdoor under ...
Read moreDetailsA psychiatrist tearing up his notes at a patient’s request is a tiny gesture of professional ...
Read moreDetailsA man who treats eye contact as a legal contract is already telling on himself. Darnell, ...
Read moreDetailsThe parking lot may be the most honest character in Ponderosa. It sits there, wide and ...
Read moreDetailsA crab in a London high-rise should not feel like a labor dispute, yet that is ...
Read moreDetailsA missing girl, a sinking phone, and a private beach full of bored heirs give Netflix ...
Read moreDetailsSugar Season 2 picks up a question Season 1 detonated and then declines to answer with ...
Read moreDetailsA dead child appearing alive in the background of a photograph is the sort of plot ...
Read moreDetailsAlex Vlack’s The Revisionist treats literature like evidence left under poor lighting. A confession here, a ...
Read moreDetailsPeter Warren’s Kill Me builds a murder mystery out of a question that most people around ...
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