Tag: Juan Pablo Medina

Snakes and Ladders Review: Political Scenarios That Emerge From a School’s Playground

Snakes and Ladders Netflix Review: This show brings audience a series of events that takes a school prefect into the world of politics.

Lucca’s World Review: Unbreakable Determination and Hope of a Mother Who Never Gives Up

Lucca's World Review: A beautiful film about the unshakable determination and hope of a mother than gives her son a new life. Read on.

Bandidos Season 2 Ending Explained: Did the Gang Find the Tear of Fire? What Happens to Regina?

Bandidos Season 2 Ending Explained: What happened in the end of the heist drama? We discuss it all!

Bandidos Ending Explained: Did Miguel and His Team Find the Treasure? What Happened to Lilí?

Bandidos Ending Explained provides details about the show and clarifies what actually happened to Lilí.

Popular articles

Daemons of the Shadow Realm Episode 8 Review: When the Past Finally Surfaces

Daemons of the Shadow Realm Episode 8 Review: With heartfelt moments, the episode slowly reveals the cracks within every side

My Royal Nemesis Episode 6 Review: Sparks Fly by the Shore

My Royal Nemesis Episode 6 Review: This episode perfectly balances comedy and romance with a major relationship milestone.

My Royal Nemesis Episode 5 Review: Se-gye’s Overconfident Romance Backfires

My Royal Nemesis Episode 5 Review: The episode balances emotional moments with chaotic comedy, ending with an unexpectedly hilarious twist.

5 Hidden Gem Shows Like The Boroughs That Will Leave You Stumped!

From Icelandic sci-fi mysteries to haunting French supernatural dramas, these hidden gem international series capture the eerie atmosphere and emotional tension that make The Boroughs so compelling.

Ladies First Review: A Surprisingly Outdated Gender-Swap Comedy Starring Sacha Baron Cohen

Netflix’s Ladies First arrives with a provocative premise and a talented cast, but the gender-swap comedy struggles to deliver sharp satire. Despite committed performances from Sacha Baron Cohen and Rosamund Pike, the film relies too heavily on repetitive role-reversal jokes and surface-level commentary.