Review by Amanda Gilmore
During a deadly high school shooting, Vada (Jenna Ortega) and fellow students Mia (Maddie Ziegler) and Quinton (Miles Fitch) survive by hiding in a bathroom stall. In the aftermath, Vada struggles with processing her emotions and suffering from PTSD. Her relationships with her family and friends, along with her view of the world are forever altered.
Canadian Actress-Writer-Director Megan Park makes her Feature-debut with this heartbreaking look at one student’s emotional fallout following a school shooting. Park creates a difficult task for herself by making her protagonist a student who doesn’t process trauma in a traditional way. Overall, Vada is a character that is so anxious about returning back to school she’s halted her life. In doing so, she has given audiences a different look into grief and trauma for a teenager, while making us question: what is the “right” way to process such a horrific experience?
From the beginning, Park brings us into the life of a modern-day teenager. We are taken into the world of social media, teen influencers, and text communication. She does an effective job of making her text messaging scenes entertaining by adding background action and music, which is scored by FINNEAS. Most importantly, she has a grasp on the slang and rhetoric of a teenager today and laces her script with authentic dialogue.
The most impactful scene in the Film happens near the beginning when the three students are in the bathroom. Park effectively uses terrifying sounds of gunshots and the reactions of Ortega and Ziegler to bring us into this horrifying experience. Once the students are in the confines of the bathroom stall, close-up shots create visual claustrophobia for Vada and Mia’s inner turmoil. The stakes and anxiety become heightened for the characters and audience when Quinton enters covered in his brother’s blood. Overall, it’s heavy material that is depicted and handled in a serious manner.
This scene is expertly acted as well. Ortega, Ziegler and Fitch’s unflinching fear are prominent and heartbreaking. There is no need to see the horror that happens offscreen because we can see the horror among their faces. Throughout the film, Ortega is magnetic to watch. She manages to portray the emotionally numb Vada in an expressive way. This is a darker role for her than her previous work and it’s clear she has an emotional range. In a minor role, Julie Bowen gives a touching performance as Vada’s anxious and caring mother. And young actress Lumi Pollack plays Vada’s younger sister Amelia. She provides moments of comic relief and has a powerful scene with Ortega near the end that requires tissues.
The Fallout screens at SXSW Wednesday, March 17, 2021 at 5 PM ET
If you love the functionality of an SUV but without all the excess bulk, the 2021 HONDA HRV TOURING is just for you. We had the pleasure of reuniting with this family of amazing vehicles just as we are coming out of shutdown out my way. While we recognize that we still have a ways to go before seeing any semblance of businesses operating at full capacity and events picking-up in the City, we appreciate the opportunity at least for the HRV in a gorgeous Aegean Blue Metallic, to have been a part of our journey through these challenging times even if it just means stocking-up on essentials (It was legit my first proper visit to a Costco!). And also seeing family and friends – human and equine – who like us have been isolating cautiously. But more importantly, it was there for us when we were successfully able to get my dad vaccinated. What a relief to know that it won’t be long before mom can get hers, and then hopefully me.
What is an HRV exactly? It is a crossover vehicle, like a Honda CRV, but more compact. This is not to say it isn’t spacious, because it nails all the marks. It more than comfortably seats five and its hatchback trunk enables you to carry plenty.
Operating with a 1.8-litre, 16-valve, SOHC, i-VTEC 4-cylinder engine and 141 horsepower @6500 rpm and 127 lb.-ft of torque @ 4300 rpm, this is perfect for everyday driving. A selling point, as is the case with many in the Honda family, is Fuel Economy. It is equipped with an ECON mode, which can get you 9.1/7.7/8.5 L/100 km (City/Highway/Combined). With fuel prices having gone up of late, paying a bit more for gas was expected, but our tank of gas lasted us about a week and our drives took us far!
The 2021 Honda HRV Touring possesses craftmanship, style and luxury. Many will appreciate its tinted windows for privacy and having beanie aboard in the backseat and belongings, this gave a sense of added security. Seating was cozy with leather-trimmed seating surfaces (heated driver and passenger), plus 60/40 Split 2nd-Row Magic Seats. An atmospheric moonroof made for serene driving and its 180-watt AM/FM Audio System with six speakers synced hassle-free via Bluetooth to my phone for a personalized experience. We admit we’ve been spoiled prior by the Honda Accord‘s 12 speakers and 452-watt system, but this does the job if you aren’t an Audiophile like us. While we wished there was a wireless phone charging plate in the HRV Touring, it isn’t a standard like the Touring editions of others in the Honda family.
The first thing I noticed when boarding was the attention to detail placed in the Dual-Zone Climate Control and Display Audio System panels. Their enhanced design looked phenomenal and above this, super-easy to navigate. We value a system that is so sophisticated it looks easy, and it is!
Aesthetically, the 2021 HONDA HRV TOURING possesses an effortless sportiness that is sleek. Front grille, dark chrome, lower body garnish, body-coloured rear roofline spoiler, project-beam LED headlights, LED foglights – the small details say it all and this is not your average SUV. It also has rain-sensing windshield wipers which are a selling point considering how much precipitation we get in the months ahead. And I am a huge fan of rear-window wipers, they are a lifesaver when visibility is an issue.
Most passengers haven’t a clue where the door handles are for the door rear doors on the HRV, but once they do, it all makes sense!
The SUV also has several of the makings which make Honda best-in-class for safety. Honda LaneWatch blind spot display, Forward Collision Warning, Collision Mitigation Breaking System, Lane Departure Warning, Lane Keeping Assist, Road Departure Mitigation, Hill Start Assist, Brake Assist, Advanced front airbags, SmartVent side airbags. Above this, we look like a pro at reversing and parallel parking thanks to that essential Multi-angle rearview camera with dyamic guidelines. Honda has thought of all these things so we don’t have to and can just focus on driving smart and safe.
The 2021 HONDA HRV TOURING starts at $35,671 CAN and is worth every penny. More here.
Some memories from our Test Drive:
Omg so I went to @Costco today and it was WILD. Didn’t know products could come in these sizes!!! 😱 pic.twitter.com/hrHvGYxYgL
— MR. WILL WONG 📸 (@mrwillw) March 12, 2021
So grateful for the 2021 Honda HRV to have been a part of our journey!
(Photo credit: Mr. Will Wong)
Review by David Baldwin
Paul Dood (Tom Meeten) wants to be famous. He has the costume, the dance routine and the ambition to win the national talent competition. Except everyone treats him like a walking punchline, and his attempts at getting to the audition are thwarted by the narcissistic actions of five different individuals. Distraught over missing his shot, Paul swears revenge and plans a deadly rampage lunch break against everyone who wronged him.
PAUL DOOD’S DEADLY LUNCH BREAK is light and deeply silly fun. The Film does not take itself seriously whatsoever, with its outrageous title merely hinting at the Film’s wildly over-the-top nature. It has a lot of heart amidst all of the absurdity, though some of the more fantastical tonal pivots may prove off-putting for some viewers. I was on board for the chaotic ride Co-Writer/Director Nick Gillespie takes us on, yet found myself unsure of what he was going for in some instances. The amount of style oozing from the Film is palpable (as are the eclectic song choices), but the sheer level of nonsense tends to push it away from being more substantial. Are we supposed to be laughing at Paul and his pain or cheering for him as all hell starts to break loose? Are we supposed to empathize with the plight of Mandeep Dhillon’s clearly mistreated character PSCO Miles, or hope that Paul stays three steps ahead of her and the rest of the police? None of this is immediately clear, and it only gets murkier as the Film’s satirical elements start being emphasized deep into the Second Act. Truthfully, I think many of these issues could have been improved and avoided if the editing was slightly more cohesive.
That said, the Supporting Cast is having a blast throughout PAUL DOOD’S DEADLY LUNCH BREAK, keenly aware of the Film’s ever-evolving tone. Dhillon is one of the Film’s clear standouts, as are June Watson as Paul’s Mum Julie and Katherine Parkinson as Paul’s crush Clemmie. They all pale in comparison to Meeten however, who commits to the role of Paul as if his very life depended on it. His comedic range is terrific and he manages to be continually captivating no matter what the story is asking of him. He is Paul Dood, and watching him is like watching a master artist at work. Meeten knows he is not acting in Shakespearean theatre, but you would never guess otherwise from how strong his performance is.
PAUL DOOD’S DEADLY LUNCH BREAK screens at SXSW Wednesday, March 17, 2021 starting at 5 PM.
From the genius mind of Lin-Manuel Miranda comes IN THE HEIGHTS! Check-out this brand-new look at the eagerly-awaited Musical coming soon to HBO MAX.
Synopsis:
Lights up on the vibrant and tight-knit community of Washington Heights… where the streets are made of music and little dreams become big. From Lin-Manuel Miranda and director Jon M. Chu, In the Heights stars Anthony Ramos, Corey Hawkins, Leslie Grace, Melissa Barrera, Olga Merediz, Daphne Rubin-Vega, Gregory Diaz IV, Stephanie Beatriz, Dascha Polanco, and Jimmy Smits. Turn up the volume. This summer, we’ll be singing along with #InTheHeightsMovie. In theaters and streaming exclusively on HBO Max June 18.
See the Trailer:
IN THE HEIGHTS arrives Thursday, June 10, 2021.
(Photo/video credit: HBO Max/Warner Bros.)
The 2021 Toronto Animation Film Festival runs online from March 24 to 27, 2021 and included this year in their lineup are Academy Award-nominated WOLFWALKERS, Germán Acuña’s Nahuel and the Magic Book, Ujicha’s Violence Voyager, and including a special screening of Sony Pictures’ classic hit Heavy Metal, followed by a Q&A with director Gerald Potterton. The Festival is comprised of more than 100 Short Films and Features.
Complete list of Programming:
SPECIAL PRESENTATIONS | FEATURE FILMS
WOLFWALKERS | 90 MINUTES
Wolfwalkers opens during Oliver Cromwell’s brutal colonization of Ireland, in the county of Kilkenny, which has fallen to English settlers after a bloody siege. On Cromwell’s orders, a young apprentice hunter, Robyn Goodfellowe (voiced by Honor Kneafsey), and her father, Bill (Game of Thrones’ Sean Bean), are sent from England to track and kill the last of the wolves that live in woods outside the city walls. Adventurous and rebellious, Robyn sneaks into the woods and discovers a world unlike any she’s ever known. There she meets Mebh (Eva Whittaker), a wild girl who was raised by wolves, and through her unique new friend begins to realize it’s not the forest that should be feared, but the “townies.” But, as she grows closer to the forest world, her relationship with her father is put to the test, as Robyn herself becomes one of the very things he is ordered to obliterate.
The final instalment in directors Tomm Moore and Ross Stewart’s “Irish folklore trilogy” is a stunning testament to their singular animation style and storytelling skills. With visual references to pre-Celtic imagery and Studio Ghibli alike — and some catchy songs — Wolfwalkers is an instant classic for all ages.
NAHUEL AND THE MAGIC BOOK | 99 MINUTES
Live Q&A with director Germán Acuña
Nahuel lives with his father in a fishing town, yet he has a deep fear of the sea. One day, he finds a magical book that seems to be the solution to this problem, but a dark wizard is after it and captures Nahuel’s father. This is where his fantastic adventure begins: to rescue his father while overcoming his deepest fears.
VIOLENCE VOYAGER | 84 MINUTES
An American boy named Bobby and his friend Akkun set out for the mountains to build a secret hideout. On their way, they stumble upon a mysterious amusement park called Violence Voyager. It doesn’t take long for things to get weird as the boys discover a group of scared children who can’t seem to escape and soon find themselves under attack by robot-like humanoids. For his three years in the making follow-up to THE BURNING BUDDHA MAN (2013) director Ujicha again employs a blend of animation and manga called “geki-mation,” creating grotesque body horror nightmare imagery from painstakingly detailed, hand-painted paper cut-outs. Chock-full of B-horror, sci-fi and kaiju film references, this blood-soaked late-night flick is not for the kiddies.
HEAVY METAL | 86 MINUTES
Based on the sexy science fiction cult comic, “Heavy Metal” combines extraordinarily stunning visuals, new wave music and a series of mind-bending stories in a unique motion picture experience. The anchor of the film is an eerie green ball that magically transports us into a series of adventures in the past, future, and into the world beyond. Included are stories of the space super heroine, Taarna; the hardboiled exploits of Harry Canyon, cab driver of the future; and the adventures of “Den:’ who the green ball changes from an introverted teen into a macho hero. This groundbreaking animation extravaganza also use the voices of John Candy, Harold Ramis, Eugene Levy and Joe Flaherty, as well as writers, directors, and artists from around the world.
THE CROODS: THE NEW AGE | 95 MINUTES
The Croods have survived their fair share of dangers and disasters, from fanged prehistoric beasts to surviving the end of the world, but now they will face their biggest challenge of all: another family.
The Croods need a new place to live. So, the first prehistoric family sets off into the world in search of a safer place to call home. When they discover an idyllic walled-in paradise that meets all their needs, they think their problems are solved … except for one thing. Another family already lives there: the Bettermans.
The Bettermans (emphasis on the “better”)—with their elaborate tree house, amazing inventions and irrigated acres of fresh produce—are a couple of steps above the Croods on the evolutionary ladder. When they take the Croods in as the world’s first houseguests, it isn’t long before tensions escalate between the cave family and the modern family.
Just when all seems lost, a new threat will propel both families on an epic adventure outside the safety of the wall, one that will force them to embrace their differences, draw strength from each other and forge a future together.
MYSTERIES OF LIFE | SHORTS
MY TAGALONG | Canada
ROBERTO | Spain
A LITTLE TOO MUCH | United States
HER VOICELESS SONG | Japan
ROUTES | Argentina
THE WHEAT KEEPER | China
UMBRELLAS | France
DARK CLOUDS & RED ROSES | China
OUTGROW | United States
HOSPLAND | China
HULLABOO | ROUGH CUT
Including a Q&A with director James Lopez
In this behind-the-scenes look, Hullabaloo director James Lopez and Jake Akuna, VFX Supervisor, will show some select rough sequences from the animated project followed by a Q&A discussing their process and the challenges with producing crowdfunded films.
DARKEST OF DAWNS | SHORTS
MANTIS LOVE | France
TOO LATE | Canada
MEMORIES FOR SALE | Costa Rica
NEUROSI5: MOMENTO | Brazil
WEIGHT OF CONSCIOUSNESS | United Kingdom
EN CONTINU | France
MY PET CAT, DEPRESSION | United States
MUM’S SWEATER | France
WINTER MEMORIE | Iran
POLKA-DOT BOY | France
IN RED | China
UNIVERSALLY REMOTE | SHORTS
CORONUS | Turkey
THE ROPE | Japan
DAYS LIKE THESE | Canada
PEBBLES | United States
COFFIN | France
THANKS, GOODBYE | Netherlands
A STEP INTO MY WALLPAPER
REAL HUMAN BEING | United States
COXSWAIN’S CHICKEN KITCHEN | United States
A COUPLE ON THE ROOFTOP, THE CELLULAR ANTENNA
AND THE METAL BIRDS | Israel
LIGHT COLLECTOR | China
SIGNS | Switzerland
FRAMED MEMORIES | Malaysia
QUARANTINE CHORUS | United Kingdom
KIDS CARTOONS | SHORTS
DINNER IS SAVED | United States
WILD | France
THE LITTLE HEDGEHOG | United States
OLLIE | Belgium
RHINO | United Kingdom
HEDERA | United Kingdom
PREPAWSTEROUS | United States
REACH | United Kingdom
TEST FLIGHT | Canada
SPELLBOUND | United Kingdom
THE STARKEEPER | United Kingdom
STUDENT SHORTS | SHORTS
EVERYTHING PIZZA | United States
THE BOX ASSASSIN | United States
THE HOTLINE | Canada
BEHIND THE SCENES | United Kingdom
WE’RE ALL GONNA DIE | Canada
SUNSHOWER | Hungary
7 WAYS TO UPGRADE YOUR BRAIN | Belgium
BREAKER POINT | Canada
SHI YANG | France
THE ALIEN NIGHTMARE | France
LA BESTIA | France
SCATTERSHOT | Canada
MIME YOUR MANNERS | United States
THE PORTRAIT OF A BORING MAN | Russian Federation
THE TRAIN RIDE HOME | United States
MY LIL’ BUD (FLOWER) | Poland
THE ODDBALL COLLECTION | SHORTS
#happy | Taiwan
SPEED | United Kingdom
7B | United Kingdom
THE MYSTERY OF LEONARDO | Belgium
INCOGNITO | Hungary
WASTE AWAY | United States
CMBR | Martina Testen
SEXY SUSHI | Singapore
RISE UP | Netherlands
WALKS ALONE | Israel
THE ORGANIZED LIFE | United States
MAD IN XPAIN | Spain
BLANKET | Germany
CARTOON PARTY | SHORTS
THE SNOW BALL | Canada
DRIED OL’ BONES | USA
MERCURY CORP | Spain
BORING | France
LEAVE ME BE! | United States
SPACE APERO | France
MR RURU’S ADVENTURE | China
SHELLSHOCKED | Canada
SWOON | Canada
REEL LIFE | France
HAUNTED | Italy
DEADLY CATWALK | France
WIRE | USA
WHAT THE HECK SHOULD I WRITE ABOUT? | Romania
MOUNTAIN MOVE | Canada
More on the Festival here, including how to get passes.
By Amanda Gilmore
This timely Documentary follows a group of Western women who left their respective countries to join ISIS. Now they want to return home but their countries don’t want them back. Therefore, resulting in them and their children being held in detention camps in northern Syria.
Director Alba Sotorra Clua has created an empathetic and sensitive documentary by giving these women a chance to tell their story. Two women in the camp many may have heard about before, are Shamima Begum, who left the UK with her two friends as a teenager, and Hoda Muthana, who allegedly incited her followers on Twitter to support the Islamic State.
We follow a group of women at a detention camp as they take care of their children. We hear their stories primarily through a writing workshop that is run by local Kurdish woman Sevinaz. Her program encourages the women to journal about why they came to Syria to join ISIS, what happened when they came, and how they feel looking back.
With The Return’s direction by Sotorra Clua, the audience is challenged to re-evaluate preconceived judgements of these women.
The Return: Life After ISIS screens at SXSW: Wednesday, March 17 at 3 PM ET
Review by Amanda Gilmore
Writer-Director Stacey Gregg is making her Feature debut with this unsettling Psychological Thriller. It follows Laura (Andrea Riseborough) who, along with her husband and son, is grieving the loss of her young daughter, Josie. When a new family moves in next door, Laura becomes close with their daughter, Megan (Niamh Dornan), who would’ve been the same age as Josie. When Megan begins talking about intimate details involving Josie and the night she died, Laura begins to believe that Megan is the reincarnation of her daughter.
Here Before is a suspenseful journey that keeps its audience on the edge of their seats. The suspense is amplified through disquieting sound and music by Adam Janota Bzowski. This sound, along with Gregg’s strong direction, creates an ominous atmosphere that becomes increasingly unsettling with each scene. Gregg’s layered Script uses Laura’s and her family’s grief to create ample amounts of mystery surrounding what is and isn’t real. This is aided by the precision editing from Brian Philip Davis. Impressively, the mystery is kept until the climax when the shocking truth is finally revealed.
At the core of Here Before is the ever-talented Riseborough, who delivers an outstanding performance and an impeccable Northern Irish accent. She roots Laura in her grief which creates audiences to relate and understand her. In doing so, audiences continue to be on Laura’s side even when her actions become questionable. Additionally, the very young Dornan turns in a powerful performance that shows talent beyond her years. She creates an equal balance of eeriness and childhood-charm in Megan which aides in the mystery of the narrative.
Here Before screens at SXSW Wednesday, March 17, 2021 at 1 PM ET.
Review by David Baldwin
It is February 2020, and Jamie (Whitney Call) is celebrating her birthday at home with her friends and her sister/roommate Blake (Mallory Everton). The pair are happy and excited for all the things they plan to do in the months ahead. Flash to March, as the COVID-19 pandemic sets in and everything changes overnight. Weeks into lockdown, they discover a letter informing them of a COVID outbreak at their Nana’s (Anna Sward Hansen) retirement community. Fearing for her safety, the pair decide they must take a road trip to save her before anything bad happens.
There is something inherently morbid about a Comedy being set during the time of COVID. With everything we have seen and learned throughout the last year, very few of those memories strike me as being funny or entertaining. That was the mindset I had watching RECOVERY, and I am certain the Creative Team behind it are expecting many others to feel the same way. With that in mind, they do their best to tip toe along the line of good and bad taste, poking fun at the more ridiculous elements of our lives for the past 12 months and leaving out the more traumatic ones. Some of these moments land well and others land with a tone-deaf thud (the jokes about their sister’s family being on a cruise become excruciating quickly). When they are not mining from the COVID well, they take detours into deranged, nonsensical situations that could only happen in an Indie film. I laughed out loud at a joke involving mouse afterbirth, but the rest of the laughs were far too infrequent for their own good.
While I think the ending is a bit tacky and lacked catharsis, RECOVERY as a whole tries its very best to be a light journey that we can all at least partially relate to. It clocks in at a breezy 80 minutes, and the breeziness is mainly a result of the camaraderie between Call and Everton. The pair wrote the Film (with Everton acting as Co-Director) and have an undeniable chemistry and bond that most actors could only dream of. They work off each other brilliantly and are comfortable taking turns at landing the best jokes. They pick each other up any time they stumble, and are genuinely having a good time making the movie together. I just wish they cut back the accents and tones Everton keeps reaching for – they just get more bewildering as the Film goes on and have zero explanation for existing.
RECOVERY screens Wednesday, March 17, 2021 starting at 1 PM.
Review by David Baldwin
It is 1999, and James (Harry Shum Jr.) is working late nights as a Video Archivist. One evening, he discovers a bizarre broadcast that aired over top of the regular programming he archives. He watches curiously multiple times, trying to understand who or what it is. Once he finds out there may be more pirated broadcasts in existence and how they may have a personal connection to him, James becomes obsessed with uncovering the truth.
At first glance, I assumed BROADCAST SIGNAL INTRUSION would be a body Horror Thriller in the style of David Cronenberg. Much to my surprise, the Film is more of a hard-boiled detective mystery filled with disturbing imagery. It is not particularly bloody or horrific imagery, though you may need to sleep with the lights on after seeing it repeated so often. The Film Noir motifs add some flavour and style to each scene, as does the score cribbed from classic Detective Thrillers. I appreciated how intense the Film gets and how well paced it is, but would have preferred it be less frustratingly enigmatic – even as we learn the truth about the pirated broadcasts.
Shum Jr. is great as James, with his moments of frantic obsession being among the highlights of the Film. He is tuned into the creepiness of the project and matches its intensity beat for beat. He could have been even better if he were afforded more time to unpack his motivations. Kelley Mack is effective yet slightly undercut in her role as Alice, who helps James with his investigation. But the Film’s standout is Chris Sullivan, who gives such a seriously unhinged performance in his short amount of screen time that it may be difficult to ever see him as the lovable Toby on This Is Us ever again.
BROADCAST SIGNAL INTRUSION screens at SXSW: Tuesday, March 16, 2021 at 9 PM ET.
By Mr. Will Wong
SXSW attendees were lucky enough to get to see all four episodes of DEMI LOVATO: DANCING WITH THE DEVIL tonight as the Opening Night Selection of the Festival this year. The four-part YouTube Docu-Series is directed by Michael D. Ratner who also directed Justin Bieber’s SEASONS Docu-Series.
Global Superstar Lovato made headlines in 2018 when she overdosed shockingly and the Series is about that moment, very piece that led to it and why Lovato got there. The Series courageously documents Lovato’s process of healing and doing the work to getting better.
Viewers will be surprised just how honest and candid Lovato gets whether it be revealing incidences of sexual trauma she experienced losing her virginity with someone else who worked on CAMP ROCK with her. And also more recently when the Drug Dealer who had been with her when she had overdosed, had taken advantage of her also. Heart attacks, strokes, partial-blindness, a Choreographer whose career was ruined after being bullied by Lovato‘s fans, we get detail and aftermath of Lovato’s overdose. The main subject and other interviewed have a degree of trust with Ratner, talking to us unfiltered, nothing off limits.
What Ratner focuses on is the work involved with the healing process. Lovato had relapsed multiple times and she looks back at her lessons learned with a genuine self-awareness and growth. She is vulnerable and there isn’t a false sense of happily ever after. Getting better takes a lot of work, self-forgiveness and surrounding oneself with the right people and that’s the take away here. We’re cheering for Lovato and leave with a sense of fulfillment that those around her believe she’s got it this time.
An additional treat is that the Docu-Series features her fans and friends Will Ferrell, Christina Aguilera and Elton John who show their support for Lovato on her journey, sharing anecdotes about their friendship with her.

The first episode of DEMI LOVATO: DANCING WITH THE DEVIL arrives March 23, 2021 on YouTube. Lovato‘s new Album Dancing with the Devil…The Art of Starting Over arrives April 2, 2021.
For advertising opportunites please contact mrwill@mrwillwong.com