TV
Stakes are suddenly higher than they’ve ever been, in Homeland’s latest outing: “Chalk One Up”.
High Fidelity gives a whole lot of new meaning to Hornby’s novel while also honoring it at the same time.
A storyteller’s greatest responsibility is societal critique, and The Wire is a prime example of how to fulfill that role.
In an episode that somehow pulls at the reigns while simultaneously cracking the whip, Homeland viewers are pulled back and forth between compelling choices and questionable ones.
While “Stardust City Rag” attempts to elevate the series, the whole episode feels tired, limp, and lacking in any coherent vision.
Last week, Holly Gibney (Cynthia Erivo) was in jeopardy, Ralph (Ben Mendelsohn) was really trying…
This episode of Homeland leaves us wondering if perhaps, the show may finally be coming to understand the responsibility in commenting on volatile real-world situations.
“Absolute Candor” is the first properly disappointing episode that finds Picard treading water and lacking any discernible direction.
With only three episodes left in HBO’s slow-burn mystery-horror series, anything can happen at this point.
While it could have taken more risks, season one of Locke & Key gives us a feasible starting point for what could be a flourishing new fantasy series.
Episode 6 of The Outsider is a step in the right direction, the intoxicating dread and craft continue to permeate the show’s structure.
Brooklyn Nine-Nine continues to prove why it’s one of the best comedies currently on television with the premiere of its 7th season.
As “Maps and Legends”, the second episode of Star Trek: Picard, comes to an end, it still feels like a show that’s yet to start telling its actual story.
With the series now concluded, if there’s one thing that The Good Place has taught us is that we shouldn’t give up on trying to be better.
Despite some stumbles and clumsy writing, the first season of AJ and the Queen is a heartwarming, heartbreaking delight that lets you ride out every emotion.