SummaryAfter a miscarriage and nearly breaking up, Ben and Vivien Harmon (Dylan McDermott and Connie Britton) move from Boston to Los Angeles with their daughter to start a new life in a house with an eerie past.
SummaryAfter a miscarriage and nearly breaking up, Ben and Vivien Harmon (Dylan McDermott and Connie Britton) move from Boston to Los Angeles with their daughter to start a new life in a house with an eerie past.
Freak Show looks like a beauty, with a wealth of fascinating characters and a little smattering of heart helping to balance out the grisly appointed rounds of a so far unidentified clown with a hellish half-mask.
Fish-eye lenses and rotating cameras don't feel at home here as in other installments, and things aren't creepy so much as grotesque. Still, there are a number of decent effects and a healthy dose of humor that keep things moving along in an entertaining way. Eventually, the many stories find their way together, which helps propel the premiere to its promising finish.
The overall picture is just a little too busy, too dense. The first episode of Hotel--the only one available to critics--is so busy trying to set up its divergent cast of characters it ends up being confusing and exhausting.
Freak Show is certainly telling a weird story, but it’s not all that scary and, worse yet, the characters are already launching into tedious monologues about civil rights for geeks.
One of the best series ever, full of twists and turns and an effective plot. My favorite seasons and for me the best ones are obviously "Freak Show", "Coven" and "Asylum"
The serie was good until the 3rd season, in the fourth loss of essence, in the fifth I am seeing with sodium strength, I hope that the next ones will change my opinion. I am from the Brazilian specialized critic.
This review is mainly about Apocalypse
The season was alright, but what makes it a 3/10 for me is the CONSTANT and blatant sexism the show has developed. Cult had a bit of it, but this season...after episode 3 almost EVERY SINGLE LINE was "men are worthless, women should rule the world".
Equality is a great thing, but it goes both ways. You can't preach about equality while writing incredibly sexist dialogue, like for example: "I have humored you men, but in no way does that mean you actually have a say". Throughout the series men are portrayed as powerhungry idiots who are constantly wrong and the only man who is portrayed as smart is the one who tries to ask the women for help. If there were characters who had these ideas it would be fine, but it's the fact that as i said, almost EVERY LINE has some of this stuff in it at some point in the season and it's clear that the show doesn't know how to do feminism without telling men they ****. It was just so frustrating to watch. I'm a man and i don't really enjoy being told what a **** piece of **** i am constantly while watching something i really wanted to enjoy...
Now that I've watched most of season 11 on Hulu, I think I'm ready to pass a verdict: this really ought to be the last season, because the writers have run out of interesting ideas, and now are only interested in preaching to their audience about trendy political or cultural issues like **** and Covid-19 hysteria (for which the AIDS epidemic of the 1980s is used as a metaphor). The first few seasons were totally non-political, and very entertaining. Now it is exactly the reverse.