-
Betty Gilpin and Jake McDorman star in a new series co-written by Damon Lindelof and Tara Hernandez.
-
What happened to Maddie Boyle??
-
Donnelly said it's the first physical scene that's intimidated her.
-
There are some familiar faces (Ben Chaplin, Nick Frost, Denis O'Hare) and some fresh faces, too!
-
Meet the stars behind Tuiri, Lavinia, and all their "novice" frenemies.
-
Charlotte Riley and Ben Chaplin star in this new miniseries about two rival British papers that gather news in completely different ways.
-
As tweeted by the show’s writer and producer, Amazon’s dark drama ‘Mad Dogs’ has decided to end on top rather than forcing a second season.
-
Mad Dogs was entertaining as the dickens from start to finish, its musings on sacrifice and regret and morality never glib or hamfisted and often quite thoughtful.
-
It’s not entirely Jazmin’s fault that the big confrontation the show built to all season feels a little muffled in the end.
-
Like
Breaking Bad and
Fargo,
Mad Dogs depends on a plot structure of interlocking catastrophes so intricate, you’d need those robot arms to pull it off.
-
This episode reminds us of Breaking Bad (in a good way, natch!).
-
It’s just one episode, but this one’s a road divided.
Without the great Alison Tolman as a stabilizing and unifying presence, “Leslie,” Mad Dogs’ sixth installment, resumes its previously very, very ...
-
Fargo’s Allison Tolman as Rochelle—an ill-fated American embassy employee who seems like our gruesome foursome’s last best hope.
-
Four episodes in, Mad Dog continues to consistently be inconsistent, at least as far as the audience's plot expectations are concerned. Writing and acting-wise, though, it's as tight as ever.
-
Like the choice to get the four friends back to their stolen boat, the decision to unmask and manhandle the Cat was a surprising act of self-denial.
-
The performances of the actors go a long way to keeping the early-Tarantino black-comedy-of-errors stuff emotionally palatable.
-
“Listen to your friend Billy Zane. He’s a cool dude. He’s trying to help you out.” That was sage advice in Zoolander, but here? Not so much.
-
The new Amazon Prime series, which debuts today, presents a different perspective on masculinity in America.
-
Plus: Why
Mad Dogs is a show about "the uselessness of the American middle-aged man."
-
The Billy Zane-starring crime drama has been allotted a full season.