Review: 'Wonder' is the cry-fest you expect, but it's also complex

By A Mystery Man Writer

Middle school can be agonizing for any kid, but, as “Wonder” begins, we suspect it’s going to be especially hard for 10-year-old Auggie Pullman. After 27 surgeries to help him see, breathe and hear, Auggie (Jacob Tremblay) doesn’t look like other children. He’s small and scarred, with a high-pitched, scratchy voice and a braided rattail, and he usually wears an astronaut helmet when he leaves the house. But after years of being home-schooled by his mother (Julia Roberts), he’s preparing to join his peers at New York’s Beecher Prep.

26 Best Cult TV Shows Ever

30 Best Romance Movies of the 21st Century, Ranked

Wolf Hall review - action comes thick and fast in this thrilling marathon, Stage

Movie review: Yes, “Wonder” is the cry-fest you expect, but it's also complex, funny and probing – The Denver Post

Reviews: The Whale - IMDb

I'll Just Be Five More Minutes: And Other Tales from My ADHD Brain by Emily Farris

The Double Life of Benson Yu, Book by Kevin Chong, Official Publisher Page

Dear Evan Hansen (film) - Wikipedia

Baz Luhrmann Knows He's the Stanley Kubrick of Confetti

The Unbound Empire (Swords and Fire, #3) by Melissa Caruso

Best Taylor Swift Songs: Top 100

Viggo Mortensen on actors behaving like babies and why he won't vote for Hillary, Captain Fantastic

GoodTherapy Silent Treatment: Preferred Weapon of Peopl

Review: 'Wonder' is the cry-fest you expect, but it's also complex, funny and probing

Japanese ghost stories dwell in the spirit of their times

©2016-2024, reintegratieinactie.nl, Inc. or its affiliates