Tag Archives: tv review

The Regime Episode 1, “Victory Day” Review

“Victory Day”

  • Creator: Will Tracy
  • Starring: Kate Winslet, Matthias Schoenaerts, Andrea Riseborough, Guillame Gallienne, Martha Plimpton, Hugh Grant

Grade: B

Warning: Reviews of The Regime will contain spoilers.

It’s been five years since Veep went off the air, and we’ve been starved for great political satire entertainment. Part of this is because real-life global politics have simply been too bizarre to spoof with subtlety. Now comes HBO/Max’s newest limited series The Regime, which marries a heightened comedy and a sharp political insight with uniquely rendered characters. In this episode 1, “Victory Day”, not all of its elements work perfectly, but it sets the groundwork for a great deal of entertainment.

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The Crown Season 6, “Sleep, Dearie Sleep” Review

“Sleep, Dearie Sleep”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Ed McVey, Luther Ford

Grade: B+

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

There’s many reasons why I’ll never be the show runner of a television series, but one major factor is the anxiety of crafting a series finale. The show runner has to balance a great number of things when making a series finale: fan expectations, lingering plot threads, and providing a sense of finality that fits the overall tone of the show. Thankfully Peter Morgan was given the leg room to end The Crown on his own terms, as opposed to any number of shows that end prematurely. That he had real-life events to fall back on doesn’t hurt either. 

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The Crown Season 6, “Hope Street” Review

“Hope Street”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Ed McVey, Luther Ford

Grade: C+

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

The Crown has made its reputation with its use of juxtapositions. How Peter Morgan has taken seemingly disconnected stories and finding a thematic connective tissue has paid off tremendously throughout its run. This batch of episodes hasn’t utilized the stylistic choice so explicitly yet, so it’s a bit curious to see the juxtaposition within Hope Street, as the results don’t always work.

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The Crown Season 6, “Ritz” Review

“Ritz”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Ed McVey, Luther Ford

Grade: B+

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

You had to wonder when The Crown would ever give Leslie Manville’s Princess Margaret the spotlight. You don’t cast a celebrated actor like Manville and have her sit in the background, occasionally delivering a line or two. And, given the show’s fondness for stories of Margaret, you had to wonder if there would be one final send-off for her before the finale. Thankfully we have Ritz, which examines Margaret’s still exorbitant lifestyle as she struggles with her health, and gives Manville the runway to deliver some Emmy-worthy moments.

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The Crown Season 6, “Alma Mater” Review

“Alma Mater”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Ed McVey, Luther Ford

Grade: B-

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

How did Kate Middleton and Prince William become entangled? I can only speak for myself, as someone who tuned out much of the royal family tabloid fodder of the early 2000s, so it’s been a bit of a curious mystery. What Alma Mater posits is that, as with many machinations throughout the course of the show, their meeting was never really something left up to chance.

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The Crown Season 6, “Ruritania” Review

“Ruritania”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Ed McVey, Luther Ford

Grade: C+

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

Two episodes into the final stretch and it kind of feels like The Crown is playing the hits. Willsmania dealt with classic familial conflicts, albeit from an entirely new perspective. With Ruritania, the show returns to Elizabeth’s ever-evolving relationship with a new Prime Minister, this time in Tony Blair (Bertie Carvel). The head of state rightfully hasn’t factored into the show much lately, so when it became clear early on that Blair would dominate this episode, a flood of memories came rushing back. The Crown has mined great material out of Elizabeth’s dealings with the various Prime Ministers over the years, and Blair is an important historical figure, so hopefully Ruritania won’t be a one-off affair.

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The Crown Season 6, “Willsmania” Review

“Willsmania”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Ed McVey, Luther Ford

Grade: B

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

Sounds plays an unexpected, minor role in Willsmania in getting into Prince William’s (Ed McVey) head space. In the opening moments, it comes as William drowns out the morning noise with music, followed by the ambient clicks and clacks as his father makes and eats his breakfast. But it’s all quickly eclipsed by the maniacal screams of William’s female fans, which dominates the episode.

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Monarch: Legacy of Monsters Review

Monarch: Legacy of Monsters

  • Creator: Chris Black
  • Starring: Kurt Russell, Wyatt Russell, Anna Sawai, Mari Yamamoto, Anders Holm, Kiersey Clemons, Ren Watabe
  • Eight episode season, five episodes watched for review

Grade: B-

Hey you! Yes, you! Do you like seeing giant monsters destroying things, wreaking havoc on everything they come across? Of course you do! Do you have at least a passing familiarity with Godzilla? Great! Do you like only seeing those monsters, including Godzilla, for a couple moments at a time, surrounded by many, many scenes of people talking about mildly interesting conspiracy theories? Have I got a show for you!

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The Crown Season 6, “Aftermath” Review

“Aftermath”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Elizabeth Debicki, Olivia Williams, Salim Daw

Grade: B

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

To my recollection – and I’m willing to be corrected if necessary – The Crown has never dipped into supernatural matters. There may have been some moments of unnatural coincidence or fabrication, but nothing comes to mind that was as explicit as what we see in Aftermath. I suppose that now is as good a time as any, when two central figures have passed away. But is it necessary? Could the show have conveyed what the spirits of Diana and Dodi are communicating otherwise, without them making appearances beyond the grave?

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The Crown Season 6, “Dis-Moi Oui” Review

“Dis-Moi Oui”

  • Creator: Peter Morgan
  • Starring: Imelda Staunton, Leslie Manville, Jonathan Pryce, Dominic West, Elizabeth Debicki, Olivia Williams, Salim Daw

Grade: B-

Warning: Reviews of The Crown season 6 will contain spoilers.

Does The Crown need a villain? The early proceedings of each of these episodes in season 6 so far show that Peter Morgan is choosing to show Mohamed Fayed as the puppet master of Diana and Dodi’s fateful night in Paris. I said previously that I don’t necessarily have a problem with this, and generally like the Greek tragedy angle of the show in this regard, but I can’t deny the optics of the show’s only non-white characters being portrayed so negatively.

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