Raising Voices (original title: Ni Una Más ) is the kind of show that initially made me want to stop watching — and then made me glad I didn’t. Based on the novel by Miguel Sáez Carral , this Spanish Netflix series explores teen life, sexual violence, and the power of speaking out. It's not always subtle, but it's effective. At First, It Felt Like Too Much The first couple of episodes? Honestly, I didn’t love them. It felt like the writers were trying to cram every possible issue related to sexual assault into one high school. Revenge porn, harassment, grooming, slut-shaming, rape culture — all at once. It was overwhelming. I wasn’t sure where to focus. Instead of building empathy, it felt like the show was going for pure shock value. It was hard to care when everything was dialed up to 100. But then something clicked. Maybe That Chaos Was the Point That disorientation — not knowing exactly what’s wrong, just feeling that something is — turns out to be inten...
Some movies entertain. Some movies challenge. And then there are movies like The Whale , that just wreck you . Directed by Darren Aronofsky and starring Brendan Fraser in what is probably the most heartbreaking performance of his career, The Whale is not easy to watch—but it’s impossible to forget. Based on a play by Samuel D. Hunter (who also wrote the screenplay), the film tells the story of Charlie, a reclusive English teacher who is slowly eating himself to death. Fraser’s performance won him a long-overdue Academy Award for Best Actor, and honestly, it’s no mystery why. His portrayal of Charlie is raw, compassionate, and almost unbearably human. You don’t just watch him—you feel every second of his pain, his hope, his denial, and his deep, desperate love for a daughter he hasn’t seen in years. A Story That Hurts to Watch This might be one of the saddest films I’ve ever seen. It’s not simply sad in a sentimental, tearjerker kind of way—it’s sad in a profoundly existenti...