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There's just enough solid jokes and suspense here to keep you watching.
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Tina Fey returns as a key voice actor in this joke-a-second series.
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Everybody dwelling in the growing ideological fringes of America gets a good lampooning here.
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Director Jeymes Samuel follows up The Harder They Fall with another ambitious project.
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The funnyguy makes a movie from a longstanding standup bit, and it should've stayed on the stage.
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The story of a young boy learning about his father's job -- and true nature -- explores themes of control, dominion and manhood.
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In the end, creator Will Tracy posits the literal, physical triumph of capital over all.
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This show is pretty much
The Zone of Interest of cringe comedy.
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Julianne Moore and Finn Wolfhard play irritating tryhards struggling to maintain their mother-son relationship.
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Its attempt to layer in social commentary is admirably ambitious, but not particularly satisfying.
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Keplinger, at long last.
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Rachel Sennot stands out in an ensemble including Maria Bakalova and Amandla Stenberg.
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This show has teeth, and in this episode it sank them a little bit deeper.
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Here's another in a long line of great Cage performances.
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If this show were nothing but a series of shots of Kate Winslet throwing open big double doors or drawing apart curtains and walking through, we’d still watch it
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Clarke and co-star Chiwetel Ejiofor work hard to sell the film's understated comedy.
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It’s the strongest, sharpest, best-looking, and (very importantly) funniest satire of wealth and power HBO has served up in its whole “satires of wealth and power” era.
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Matthias Schoenaerts, Andrea Riseborough, Hugh Grant and Martha Plimpton also star in the series, created by Succession's Will Tracy.
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This is the same duo behind the extraordinary Shiva Baby, but with the addition of Ayo Edebiri. You can't lose!
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It's an Oscar longshot, but it shouldn't be.