The series returns with a sharp third season that mines immense humor from the Sisyphean pursuits of its characters.
The series proves too hurried and scattered to penetrate much beyond the surface of its universe and characters.
The series consistently opts for excess over restraint, with disorienting results.
Guillermo del Toro’s horror anthology exudes an alluring air of mystery, rough around the edges but coursing with energy.
The series uses the trappings of horror to explore the power of storytelling as a means of reckoning with the unfathomable.
Under the Banner of Heaven ambitiously grapples with the struggle to attain personal agency in the crushing course of history.
Though it’s slow to carve out the particulars of its world, Outer Range is ultimately an alluring exploration of lives and lands lost.
Despite the centrality of a mental break to its proceedings, Marvel’s Moon Knight largely pretends at psychological depth.
HBO’s The Gilded Age considers the social currents of the historical moment, alluringly cutting through the delusions of its aristocrats.
Season two of The Witcher allows a deeper exploration of the forces motivating its characters.
Firebite explores the dangers of monsters both real and imagined with subtle melancholy.
The Shrink Next Door rapidly hops between decades but feels like it moves at a crawl, dulling the myriad charms of its leading cast.
Star Wars: Visions refreshes the Star Wars universe with an eclectic range of styles and tones and a subversive streak.
Season two of Ted Lasso clicks into a comedic groove when it delves into the messier idiosyncrasies of its characters.
Wellington Paranormal remains eminently watchable thanks to its considerable B-movie charm and its leads’ oddball chemistry.
The show’s attempt to individualize its protagonists largely reduces them to predictable, banal archetypes.
The anime series is, at its center, a comforting fairy tale of clear-cut good and evil.
The series leaves no police procedural cliché untouched but ultimately transcends its familiarity.
The series gets increasingly mired down in the game’s arcane and diffuse lore, yielding a befuddling and scattered narrative.
The Amazon animated series delights in the pleasure that superheroes must feel when wielding their powers.