"I'm a starving artist..." Blue Fox Ent. has released an official trailer for Sugar Daddy, which is the most blatantly obvious title for a film that is about, you guessed it, a "sugar daddy" relationship. This premiered at the Whistler Film Festival last fall, and also played at the virtual Portland Film Festival this month. Kelly McCormack stars as Darren, a talented young musician struggling to make ends meet. She decides to try out a "sugar daddy paid-dating website" and ends up tumbling "down a dark rabbit hole that forces her to grow up fast, shaping her music, and how she sees the world." The film's cast also includes Colm Feore, Amanda Brugel, Ishan Davé, Aaron Ashmore, Kaniehtiio Horn, Nicholas Campbell, and Hilary McCormack. This one seems interesting but a bit too artsy, sacrificing a good story for quirky cinematic style and flashy colors, but there might still be something worthwhile to it.
- 3/9/2021
- by Alex Billington
- firstshowing.net
Zeph's homecoming does not go smoothly, and D'avin worries about his baby brother on a revealing episode of Killjoys.
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This Killjoys review contains spoilers.
Killjoys Season 5 Episode 8
“How exactly do you plan on turning these violent felons into freedom fighters?”
Let’s be honest; “Don’t Stop Beweaving” probably doesn’t make the list of best Killjoys’ episodes. That said, as usual, there’s still a lot to like about a chapter that flounders a bit with its prison story and then rebounds nicely with Zeph’s homecoming and D’avin’s matchmaking. Though some scenes feel as if they’ve been included merely for effect, despite this minor flaw, Killjoys succeeds because of its richly drawn and wonderfully charismatic characters.
Even though the spectre of war looms in the background, Johnny’s opening musical number underscores the importance of trust earned over time. Yes, it...
tumblr TV
This Killjoys review contains spoilers.
Killjoys Season 5 Episode 8
“How exactly do you plan on turning these violent felons into freedom fighters?”
Let’s be honest; “Don’t Stop Beweaving” probably doesn’t make the list of best Killjoys’ episodes. That said, as usual, there’s still a lot to like about a chapter that flounders a bit with its prison story and then rebounds nicely with Zeph’s homecoming and D’avin’s matchmaking. Though some scenes feel as if they’ve been included merely for effect, despite this minor flaw, Killjoys succeeds because of its richly drawn and wonderfully charismatic characters.
Even though the spectre of war looms in the background, Johnny’s opening musical number underscores the importance of trust earned over time. Yes, it...
- 9/6/2019
- Den of Geek
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