The Morning Show
SimilarFull Circle,
Gossip Girl New Amsterdam, Nine: Nine Time Travels, Nothing Remains the Same, Off Centre, Person of Interest, Rescue Me, Sweetbitter, Tarzan, Taxi, The Alienist, The Beat, The Comeback, The Equalizer, The Many Faces of Ito, The Strain, You,
StarringJon Hamm,
Aaron Sorkin learned the hard way that no one takes TV as seriously as TV people. When he followed up his critically acclaimed The West Wing, a show about the inner workings of the White House, with Studio 60 on the Sunset Strip he discovered that you can’t treat everything with the gravity of a cabinet meeting and the wit of a theater major who gets straight Bs. His backstage drama about a fake sketch show pleased no one. When he tried to course correct with The Newsroom he tried to portray the American news media out to be brave warriors for the cause of truth. Both shows have lived rich second lives as meme generators about what Andrew Sarris would call "strained seriousness." Continue Reading →
Sing 2
SimilarBack to the Future Part II (1989),
Back to the Future Part III (1990) Ice Age (2002), Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs (1937), Wallace & Gromit: The Curse of the Were-Rabbit (2005),
StarringFisher Stevens,
Aadrman's original 1989 Creature Comforts did something unique. Director Nick Park took interviews with everyday Britain residents and then put those vocals into the mouths of stop-motion animated zoo animals. The result was fascinating, as two disparate elements combined to tap into the daily woes which inform our lives. Whether you’re a lion trapped in an exhibit, or a man just yearning for the space of your original home country, melancholy emotions are universal. Continue Reading →
Vanity Fair
Mira Nair’s 2004 adaptation of Vanity Fair opens with our famous heroine, Becky Sharp, as a young child tearfully watching her father sell off a portrait of her deceased mother. The portrait, a dark Gainsborough-esque profile with its sut-colored background, dusty white skin, and faintly rosy cheeks, means so much for young Becky, and us in Nair’s audience. As the camera tracks at child-height, watching the portrait leave the shop, Becky loses the last connection to a lineage that will both help and hinder her social mobility. Continue Reading →