Ryan Murphy
To support a high school girl who wants to bring her girlfriend to the prom a group of self-obsessed theater stars go to a small conservative Indiana town.
Ratched returns Murphy to his deliciously horrific TV roots, bringing the origin of an iconic character to life for a new generation.
The performances, writing, direction, and overall energy remain superb, further showing a series that is as confident as it is bold.
With the talent involved and the potential of its revisionist take on Golden Age Hollywood, Netflix’s Hollywood provides minor thrills where it promised major dramatic power.
In a compassionate ending, the season wraps up with a happy ending for all, a rarity for American Horror Story.
In this episode of AHS 1984, we are given Richter’s background, completing the grisly characteristics of his damaged self.
By this episode’s completion, we now know everyone is on the hunt for revenge and a bloodbath. Who will be victorious in the great clash of 1989? Only one way to find out.
With the second half of the season left to still air, and the follow-up episode giving attention to the survivors, AHS 1984 seems primed for a sequel.
As we approach the midseason, body count rising and with no escape, “True Killers” was proof that AHS 1984 is far from slowing down.
With a return to its roots, AHS 1984 is stronger than it has been in a long time, delivering the horror and the entertainment of genre films of the past.
While episode 2 of AHS 1984 provided new insights, more than enough questions arose as murder, secrets and terror lurked in the shadows.
Ryan Murphy’s first Netflix venture is a vapid political satire almost entirely void of humour and heart.
In a lover letter to the horror genre, AHS 1984 packed a nostalgic punch – leaving the door wide open for more homage to come.
A beautifully orchestrated collaboration of horror films, AHS 1984 is gruesome, graphic and for those who love gore, oh so satisfying.
Madison Montgomery is the most fascinating character in the AHS world, and in Apocalypse, our perception of her changes once more.