Tag: TV Review (11-20 of 985)

Jan 21 2013 10:09 PM ET

'The Following' premiere review: Kevin Bacon, Edgar Allan Poe, violence, vodka, and regret

Kevin-Bacon-The-Following-TOUT

Image Credit: Michael Lavine/Fox

Because it is the first new series to premiere containing substantial gore since the killings in Newtown, CT, The Following has taken an unfair amount of criticism for depictions of violence on television. As always with pop culture, drawing direct lines to entertainment that “glorifies” or even inspires violence is a vexed proposition. The Following is certainly no more violent than, say, American Horror Story: Asylum, which is wrapping up what’s turned out to be a very artful season this week, or Criminal Minds, which has long been drearily cynical.

Creator-producer-writer Kevin Williamson played horror for giggles in Scream, but the horrors of a mass murderer get a grim, humorless treatment in The Following. It’s a series that makes the most of the gaunt face of star Kevin Bacon. Bacon, whose previous TV acting consisted mostly of pre-stardom soap opera roles, was ripe for a television series: In his early 50s, he’s got the trim, wiry body of someone at least a decade younger. He’s become the Iggy Pop of soulful acting. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 20 2013 10:57 PM ET

'Chasing the Saturdays' premiere review: Brit girl-group sobs and screams in new reality show

CHASING-SATURDAYS

Image Credit: Timothy White/E!

Wedged between two new episodes of Kourtney and Kim Take Miami, Chasing the Saturdays is an E! channel reality show about a hit English-Irish girl-group trying to make it in America. The premiere edition on Sunday night did a decent job of establishing these women’s personalities if not exactly showcasing their music, even as it suggested they’ve got a ways to go before they can reach the exalted heights of fame that the Kardashians have achieved. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 19 2013 01:10 AM ET

'Fringe' series review: Darker than amber, lighter than air

Fringe-Liberty_510x317.jpg

Image Credit: Liane Hentscher/Fox

In the end, Fringe — which concluded with a back-to-back, two-episode wallop on Friday night — fulfilled nearly every promise it made to its audience over the course of five seasons. It remained true to its core values: the primacy of family, the sacredness of trust, the joy of a good joke, the exhilaration of intellectual inquiry, and the jolting power of love. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 18 2013 10:46 AM ET

Lance Armstrong and Oprah Winfrey: Power and celebrity trump truth and contrition

lance-armstrong-oprah-02

Image Credit: Oprah Winfrey Network

In the end (and it hasn’t ended yet), it always comes down to power. Lance Armstrong still has control: He’s the one Oprah Winfrey agreed to appear alongside, and being interviewed by her confers more of Winfrey’s mass-appeal influence upon his already-extensive power. What do I mean by power in this context? Imagine following Lance Armstrong around today, January 18; I’ll bet you’ll see no lessening of the deferential treatment he’ll receive from nearly everyone who comes into contact with him. This is not a man who has been so disgraced he’s no longer treated like a V.I.P. For all his pious confessions of guilt, of bullying, of helping to destroy careers, he remains addicted to control and the impact he’s had on the sport he’s helped to traduce. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 16 2013 07:04 PM ET

NRA's new videos attack Obama's gun plan as hypocritical, citing the President's daughters: VIDEO

Today, TV news channels broadcast live President Obama’s new, extensive proposals to try and stop more gun violence. Among his many recommendations was that “Congress should fund research into the effects that violent video games have on young minds. We don’t benefit from ignorance.” But most of the President’s plan was directed at guns. The push-back in the media was immediate. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 14 2013 09:05 PM ET

'Continuum' premiere review: Can this Syfy show be your new sci-fi obsession?

continuum-rachel-nichols

Image Credit: Syfy

Continuum is a crisp, crackerjack series that premiered on Monday night on the Syfy channel. It’s a hit in Canada, where the Vancouver-filmed and -set series has already aired its first season, and it deserves a substantial audience in America. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 13 2013 11:44 PM ET

Golden Globes review: Fey and Poehler presided over a night loaded with surprises

GOLDEN-GLOBES

Image Credit: Gavin Bond/NBC

You knew going into it that The Golden Globes were bound to be funny. Nearly every joke told or stunt pulled by hosts Tina Fey and Amy Poehler was solidly, often exceedingly, funny, from Poehler’s line “When it comes to torture I trust the woman married for three years to James Cameron” to Fey’s admonition to Taylor Swift to “stay away from Michael J. Fox’s son” — startled-looking, handsome Sam Fox, this year’s Mr. Golden Globe. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 13 2013 02:54 PM ET

'Enlightened' season premiere review: Watch this Laura Dern show tonight, please

enlightened-season-2

Image Credit: HBO

There’s a lot on TV tonight — the Golden Globes, new episodes of The Good Wife and Downton Abbey, the season premiere of Girls — but let me urge you to try and catch the second-season premiere of HBO’s Enlightened. This half-hour co-created by co-stars Laura Dern and Mike White is extraordinarily good: funny and moving and constantly surprising. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 11 2013 11:06 PM ET

'Banshee' premiere review: The new pulp fiction: Sexy, violent, Amish

banshee-antony-starr

Image Credit: Fred Norris/Cinemax

In Banshee, a muscled bullet-head played by Antony Starr was released from prison, grabbed a quick bit of sexual intercourse from a welcoming waitress, stole a car, and quickly assumed the identity of a dead man who was about to become the new sheriff of Banshee, Pennsylvania. If you bought this premise, and looked past the fervid exaggeration of the opening moments that are meant to keep Cinemax viewers from switching the channel, you were probably drawn into the clever, well-filmed, intriguing saga set up by series creators Jonathan Tropper and David Schickler. READ FULL STORY »

Jan 11 2013 12:40 AM ET

Jimmy Kimmel, week one: Here's how his place in talk-show history is already taking shape

As we arrive at the end of the first week of Jimmy Kimmel’s new time period, it may seem a tad premature to start affixing a position to Kimmel in the constellation of 11:30 p.m. late-night stars. But already, trends in the viewership of Jimmy Kimmel Live!, The Tonight Show with Jay Leno, and The Late Show with David Letterman, as well as the personalities of their hosts, suggest a few interesting things. READ FULL STORY »

Advertisement

TV Recaps

Powered by WordPress.com VIP
Best angsty Tony Soprano moment?