HBO
Silicon Valley’s season 6 got the perfect ending, cementing it as one of the most impactful and highly relevant shows about the technological world.
In this episode, we got some of our best performances, most intense dialogue, and action sequences that keep you on the edge of your seat.
With its fifth episode, His Dark Materials became less of the title, and more of the characters we want to see succeed.
This episode of His Dark Materials expands the show’s reach and vision just beyond one character, so that we can speculate on things to come.
His Dark Materials is an adventure story at its core, and we’re finally starting to get into the adventuring.
The Leftovers is a very deep series series, one that is introspective and personal. It’s subversive, unrelenting, and keeps you on your toes.
Watchmen has hit a little under the halfway point, the pins are being set up and knocked down at the bat of an eye, and it just keeps getting more and more clever every week.
Like the novel that came before it, Watchmen elaborates on its characters’ futures vs their pasts in ways only the author can imagine.
If the rest of the season of His Dark Materials is as good as its second episode, we’re in for a great season.
His Dark Materials is, at its core, a story of adventure, so strap in and let’s see where the zeppelins take us.
Watchmen is a bit of a weird one right now. Looking back on these episodes it seems rather confusing, because that’s just how it is.
Watchmen is looking to be a thrilling and satisfying continuation of the world that changed the world 30 years ago.
Although Helen Mirren’s performance as Catherine the Great is good, the miniseries itself was a chore to finish despite weighing in at only four hours.
Succession not just succeeds at expanding the strong foundation that the first season built, it also keeps escalating the stakes, tensions and hilarity.
Stephanie Archer had the opportunity to speak with Amy Schatz, director of In the Shadows of the Tower: Stuyvesant High School On 9/11.