Ep. 9 to Ep. 13 of May I Ask for One Final Thing? confirm that this action-packed anime is on the lighter and more comedic side in terms of story. Even when things are getting genuinely dire and horrific, Scarlet doesn't lose sight of herself. Specifically: she never loses her love of beating the
May I Ask for One Final Thing? thickens up the plot for Scarlet in Ep. 8 "May I Offer You a Fist in Place of a Handkerchief?". All to enhance the drama and mystery surrounding the events taking place in her country, with Terenezza seemingly at the head of all the unrest there. Ah well, it at least
May I Ask for One Final Thing? gives us a bit of a break with Ep. 5 "May I Clobber This Asshole Prince?". All as a reprieve from all the action and drama from the previous episode. But while this episode does feature loads of fluff and romantic comedy, it also thickens up the plot just a bit in
May I Ask for One Final Thing? continues the story of Scarlet's beatdown of the corrupt nobility in Ep. 4 "May I Go to See My Fists' Beloved One (Punching Bag)?". This time, she gets to use her fists on the heart of the slavery trade, spilling their blood right after they spilled out just how
May I Ask for One Final Thing? Ep. 2-3 continues the story of Lady Scarlet as she goes on a quest to punch the unjust. All because it's just so satisfying to punch evildoers in the face. Oh, and because it's the right thing to do, of course. Especially when doing so gains her new allies. May I Ask
Last week's episode of Pretty Little Liars: Summer School left off with Faran (Zaria) taking on Bloody Rose Water's test like a champ. Of course, Bloody Rose Waters is a sore loser. So, she still attacks Faran, who not so easily gets away but not before slicing her arm with a knife. This week's
Joe Bob Briggs and Darcy the Mail Girl returned for one of their four final specials for The Last Drive-In with a creature feature meets modern horror pairing, bringing together Rawhead Rex (1986) and Oddity (2024). It is a bizarre double feature on paper, and somehow even stranger in execution.
Hokum follows in the footsteps of other horror movies released recently that are what we like to call "slow burns." That subgenre usually starts slow and brings our characters into another world or brings an item from another world into ours. Hokum comes from writer/director Damian McCarthy, who