While the series draws extensive inspiration from Bob’s Burgers, it boasts its own distinct charm.
Though weighed down by too many moving pieces, the series finds hilarity and pathos in the tale of an alien’s assimilation.
The series trades Marvel’s typically dire stakes and intergalactic scale for lighthearted intimacy.
Season three rivals its predecessors in its intoxicating blend of bleak cynicism and irreverent comedy.
The series takes on Catherine the Great with off-kilter comedy and startling poignancy.
The series suggests that winning hearts and minds is a naïve pipe dream, a strategy more fit for TV than for electoral politics.
The lighting-strike chemistry of the show’s central couple fuels its exploration of parenthood’s highs and lows.
The series dives into megalomania and workplace chaos with eccentric, frenzied energy.
Despite the sordid, festering material that the series explores, what ultimately emerges is sheer beauty.
The series taps into violence like a lifespring, finding its footing with energetic fight sequences.
The series suffocates its promising characters with the tedium of backroom politics.
The series is an uneasy, sometimes nauseating, and often fascinating examination of our current moment.
Insipid comedy aside, the Netflix series offers evocative reflections on the premature death of a generation’s childhood.
While the miniseries is mesmerizing to take in, beneath its aesthetic splendor lie vast, unplumbed depths.
The show’s fundamental goal isn’t to present love that’s unique to the current moment, but to expose the universality of its stories.
You can feel Fox’s new animated series figuring itself out in its first episode.
The series feels like a vehicle built merely to convey the information dug up by its progenitors.
The series is a genre patchwork whose individual elements fail to coalesce into a coherent whole.
The series is a compelling and humanizing study of its characters, the faith they profess, and the world they strive to proselytize.
The series manages to pile on the cataclysms without taking pleasure in the pain of its characters.