Lucifer’s not such a bad guy. Or at least that’s what Netflix would like you to believe.
Stephen King’s favorite book hits Apple TV+, and it comes with all the problems you’d expect.
Netflix’s latest anime entry features a world full of robots (and one human) digitally pondering existential questions.
This comedy, like its star, isn’t normal at all. Nor is it nice, clean fun for the whole family.
Amazon Prime’s dramatization of a Pulitzer Prize book about slavery is powerful but difficult to watch.
DC and CW attempt to mash the vibe of Guardians of the Galaxy, Doctor Who and a zany fever dream …
This anime show seems like it’s aimed at teens. But the graphic violence and Netflix’s own TV-MA rating send seriously …
Intergenerational conflict is never easy. And it’s even harder when those involved have super powers.
It’s one thing to tell a difficult story. It’s another to tell a sadistic one.
It’s a typical HBO original—filled with the unfortunate, predictable ingredients that have made them famous.
Nickelodeon’s puppet-propelled sword-and-sorcery series aims young, but is still a bit edgy at times.
This Victorian-era Netflix offering is dark tale filled with just about every abhorrent thing you can imagine.
As Supergirl flies over the city of Metropolis, heroic struggles abound, of course … as does some content that’s less …
While it does sidestep some issues, it amplifies others. And those latter parts make this an easy call for us …
The Falcon and the Winter Soldier is less magical than WandaVision, but more violent and vulgar.














