Category: TV Reviews

  • ‘Beef’ is road rage revenge well done | Non-spoiler review

    ‘Beef’ is road rage revenge well done | Non-spoiler review

    Beef starts as a road rage revenge comedy that quickly careens into a dark but profoundly complex character study of the Asian-American experience

    Beef is a delightfully unhinged road rage revenge dark comedy that careens into a complex character study of the American Dream and two different people united by their dissatisfaction with life — and enraged by the people around them. Steven Yeun and Ali Wong are sublime anti-heroes.

    Beef begins streaming on Netflix on April 6th.

    While the inciting incident of Netflix’s new series Beef is dramatic, it’s perhaps not quite as dramatic as you’d expect. When we are first introduced to Danny Cho (Steven Yeun) he’s in line at a home improvement store called Forsters suspiciously returning three portable grills and a carbon monoxide alarm. “You’ve tried to return these three times before,” the cashier quips before Danny sulks back to his car. However, as he backs out of his parking spot he nearly hits a white Mercedes SUV. The driver honks their horn a touch too long, which annoys the already aggravated Danny. To make matters worse, they stop, roll down their window, and flip Danny the bird. 



    The ensuing chase is reckless as Danny tries to get a look at the driver. Flower beds are destroyed, red lights are run, and near crashes abound. However, they never come face to face. Instead, Danny memorizes the license plate and vows to track her down. The cold open is so concise and sharp. Without the context of the participants it’s shocking. However, as “The Birds Don’t Sing, They Screech in Pain” goes on, we learn exactly why Danny and Amy’s (Ali Wong) reactions make sense and how it careens both of them into an existential tail spin — that’s where the real dramatics start.

    When you’re at the edge of a cliff, the smallest nudge will send you plummeting over the edge.

    We’re introduced to both of our protagonists’ — or are they antagonists? (only time will tell) — inner circles. There’s Amy’s house husband George (Joseph Lee), a paragon of the wealthy Los Angelean holistic bohemian, who instead of asking Amy what’s troubling her when she returns home tells her to take a deep breath and focus on the positive — “let’s fill out our gratitude journals,” he suggests. On the other side, Danny’s brother Paul (Young Mazino) is a man-child who spends his days playing video games and trading crypto instead of working with Danny on his contractor business. While both characters fill archetypes — as does all of the supporting cast — the series progressively challenges our assumptions about them each episode. 

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AFPIMHBzGDs

    Amy, a successful entrepreneur who founded a luxury plant brand, is in the throes of a deal with Jordana Forster (Maria Bello), the egregiously wealthy owner of the Forster line of home improvement stores. Wong’s portrayal of Amy as a product of the #girlboss generation is instantly intriguing as she makes sure to show the cracks in the facade. Glimmers of her 1,000-watt smile fading tell us everything we need to know about her — she has to remain in control but is slowly losing it. Even in couples therapy where Amy and George are working through his penchant for liking her employee’s thirst trap pictures on Instagram — “Baby I can explain, I’m just saving the captions” — she has a rehearsed, well-studied response that is designed to appease anyone with a psych degree. It doesn’t. Eventually someone under that much pressure will eventually crack. 

    However, there are moments when Amy shows her hand. Like when she lets slip about her mother, “she thought that talking about your feelings is the same as complaining.” It’s those flashes of biting commentary about the first generation Asian-American experience that surprise you amongst the nearly slapstick chaos of Beef. Danny, seemingly a chronic failure to start, would rather lie and tear the people around him down to make them than seem like he’s failed again. Amy, a workaholic, can’t seem to let go of the ladder that she’s been climbing for decades, one that she doesn’t seem to want to climb, even if it means leaving those she cares about on the ground.


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    The eponymous beef between Danny and Amy gives them both purpose. Even if that purpose is to win at all costs. What’s incredible about Beef‘s trajectory, is that when blood is spilled in the final episodes, we almost forget what exactly they were beefing about in the first place.

    In “The Drama of Original Choice,” we learn more about both Amy and Danny’s pasts as Beef further digs into its exploration of the Asian diaspora. However, we don’t just see their pasts, we see their parents’. We see the hope and dreams that they put upon their kids — just like the bagel in Everything Everywhere All At Once — and the sacrifice they had to make to give them the opportunity. That amount of pressure will cause anything to break, even if it becomes a diamond first like Amy.

    By series end, all the periphery characters become victims of both Danny and Amy’s own pride — and their beef. No one makes it out unscathed or unchanged. Whether it’s Paul who lives constantly in Danny’s shadow (and unwanted protection) or Amy’s husband George who has to find validation from his mother Fumi (Patti Yasutake) rather than his own wife. There’s Amy’s neighbor and Jordana’s confidant Naomi (Ashley Park), whose seemingly idealistic housewife life is threatened by Amy’s success — “I work,” she tells Amy, “I have my non-profit.”Beef is about trauma and our response to it. But the road rage incident isn’t the trauma. It’s the inciting incident of Danny and Amy’s reckoning with their pasts, how it affects their presents, and their paths for the future. It is one of the most incisive deconstructions of the first generation Asian-American experience.

    In the series’ most-powerful moment — and Ali Wong’s future Emmys clip — Amy asks her therapist, “do you think love could really be unconditional?” The series answers that question in its own way. Even if things need to be destroyed to get there.


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  • RuPaul’s Drag Race “One Night Only” review (15×01): The best premiere in years

    RuPaul’s Drag Race “One Night Only” review (15×01): The best premiere in years

    Each week I am ranking the maxi-challenge performances and runways each episode of RuPaul’s Drag Race season 15. Here’s the rankings for “One Night Only”.

    RuPaul’s Drag Race is back with its biggest season yet. Sixteen drag queens are vying for the title of America’s Next Drag Superstar and a cash prize of $200k, the largest in the show’s herstory.

    30-second episode review

    After season 12’s redefining premiere “I’m That Bitch” with queen Nicki Minaj, Drag Race has struggled with their premieres as the casts and episode count have ballooned. However, season 15’s “One Night Only” seems to have found the solution—a supersized episode with a slightly different format than we’re used to. While we do have split entrances, having them all in one episode allows us to meet all the queens in one week but have some time to get to know them separately before the marathon of a maxi-challenge. In my opinion, the talent show should be reserved for All Star seasons, but this was a solid entry with a lot of good performances and three great performances. Sure, there were a lot of lip syncs, but for as many safe boring ones there were a slew of exciting unique ones.

    The show was also paced really well. Despite there being a record sixteen queens I felt I was able to get to know a little about each one. Even those that weren’t one of the main characters of the episode like Aura or Robin.

    The Maxi-Challenge

    In a rare alignment, I agreed with the tops and the bottoms this episode (but I’m still anticipating some buffoonery very soon). The only change I would have made is critiquing eight girls—four tops (ouch) and four bottoms (a nightmare)—so more of the massive cast could get feedback.

    The Tops

    1. Anetra: Give her an Emmy, Grammy, Oscar and Tony. One of the best talent show performances in Drag Race herstory. I laughed, I cried, I gagged. What I loved about the number (similarly to Pangina Heals’ on UK vs The World) is the breadth and pacing. She hit multiple talents back to back (comedy, voguing, jiu jitsu!) so there isn’t a moment to rest in those sixty seconds—not a second wasted. And she was smart for not telling the girls about the jiu jitsu. The gag when she hit that first board was palpable.
    2. Marcia Marcia Marcia: While she is a beautiful and graceful dancer (you betta werk that BFA), often more sincere performances don’t do well in the talent show (Gia Gunn was robbed!). Which is why it was brilliant of Marcia to frame her performance around a teenage girl worshipping her “teen” idol Ross Matthews. It was stupid (complimentary). It was impressive. It was drag.
    3. Jax: If you’re going to do a lip sync, this.. is how… you do it. The impressive stunts aside—three back handsprings and then landing on your titties!—bringing out a jump made of braided hair ATTACHED TO YOUR HAIR is what we call high drag. Elevated. I pity the fool who has to lip sync against her.

    The Bottoms (from best to worst)

    1. Loosey: I agreed with Loosey’s low placement based on the performance (girl… unless you sound like Jan or Monet don’t even try it), but even the audacity to sing live saves her for me. Unlike Jaremi FKA Phi Phi O’Hara and Adore Delano before her, I think everything around her performance was solid (song choice, look). It’s just the actual performing that was her downfall. I think her look saves her too.
    2. Amethyst: Such a terrific concept that was bungled in execution. The judges were completely right in that she delivered the punchline way too soon. The wine should have been the first joke, then the baby reveal at the end. It would have been nice if she had some set-pieces like the other girls that she could search around. Instead, it just looked like an actual mother walking through the park.
    3. Irene Dubois: In concept, this is a killer idea. But this (ironically) would have made a terrific TikTok video. Sketches and standup don’t do well in the talent show because they’re low energy and often lack levels, Irene took that to the next level. If she had done this as a song like Trinity the Tuck in All Stars 4, then maybe it would’ve gone over better.

    The Runways

    The Cast of RuPaul's Drag Race season 15
    The cast of RuPaul’s Drag Race season 15

    The runway category is “Who is she?” I was looking for pieces that clearly communicated who the queen is, their personal style of drag, and, of course, a well put together garment. Overall, the runway was a bit underwhelming especially for a category as broad as this. I wish I saw more inventiveness or interesting concepts. Here’s my ranking:

    1. Sasha Colby: Icons being icons. This is Vegas showgirl elegance after dark. I love the maroon and black color palette and how the somewhat understated dress lets the headpiece do the talking. Sasha, the fashion girl of the season? TOOT.
    2. Sugar: The more I look at this look the more I love it. While I was skeptical when she walked out and it was a clear Belle reference, the way she elevated it with the corset and asymmetrical skirt that had a fun belt detailing up top. TOOT.
    3. Mistress Isabelle Brooks: For a runway titled “Who is she?” Mistress understood the assignment. If I knew nothing about her I would know she’s a DRAG QUEEN from Texas. Rhinestoned and fringed on every inch with a perfectly proportion-ized body. Mistress is teaching the children (or at least Sugar and Spice). TOOT.
    4. Luxx Noir London: It’s a bit reminiscent of Drag Race Season 10 winner Aquaria’s evil twin runway, but the color palette compliments her skin so beautifully (she is oiled for the gods). And she’s right, does anyone still wear a hat? They should. TOOT.
    5. Loosey LaDuca: Body-ody-ody. Loosey’s silhouette is correct. The definition of hourglass. The second she stepped out I got the Britney reference, but what I love is the dress stands on its own. This is drag, mama.
    6. Malaysia Babydoll Foxx: And this is drag, baby(doll). A classic silhouette, pristine white and dripping in glittering rhinestones. You could see her even if the lights were off. Not only that, but the body was correct. TOOT.
    7. Spice: Similarly to Sugar (I’m hoping this isn’t a recurring theme, though), I love the elevated Disney princess vibe. What made this slightly less successful than her twin is the color. Obviously you couldn’t really get around it with the Ariel reference, but I think you lose some of the detailing that stood out in Sugar’s look. Still I clocked the ostrich feathers. TOOT.
    8. Robin Fierce: Sure it’s a body suit, but it’s a beautiful sparkly body suit with a tearaway! There were some fit issues at the top of the garment, but I really enjoyed that hair which was reminiscent of the bagel from Everything Everywhere All At Once. If you know, you know. TOOT.
    9. Anetra: It’s giving C-3PHo and I’m living for it. I don’t love the black bulletproof vest, but the fact that she made this gives me confidence that she’ll kill design challenges. TOOT.
    10. Jax: I might be biased because I live in the East Village (and have stepped on a rat in Tompkins), but I loved this 80s/90s retro NYC look. It reminded me of an elevated version of Asttina Mandella’s infamous ASOS jacket runway from UK Season 2. Like that runway, the girls that get it get. And I got it. TOOT.
    11. Irene Dubois: I’m a horror gay, so I immediately understood and loved the reference to Alien. I do wish there was something trailing off of it, whether a cape or a train (or a tail). The bottom just feels a little bare. But still gorg. TOOT.
    12. Marcia Marcia Marcia: It’s clean, well-done, and on-brand. Still, it left me underwhelmed for a first runway, especially since it’s so similar to her entrance look. I’m hoping to see more um… versatility from her as the season progresses. TOOT.
    13. Salina Estitties: After her entrance and performance looks I was nervous for Salina, but I liked her deconstructed West Coast Latina getup. The jacket/vest give a shoutout to her culture while the draggy pants elevate it and tie it all together. But that hat and shirt… still, TOOT.
    14. Amethyst: I like this vague pastel K-pop girlie-inspired look, but it also feels a bit like the outfit is wearing her (ironically, I hate when the judges use this critique). It looks well-made and she styled it well, but something wasn’t clicking for me. Still, not bad. TOOT.
    15. Princess Poppy: I was… underwhelmed. While it’s certainly pretty and I liked the shape of the tutu, something in the bodice wasn’t quite right. Whether it was the nude illusion or the shape I’m bot sure, but this wasn’t doing it for me. BOOT.
    16. Aura Mayari: Baby… you can’t come in with that much confidence and then present this on the runway. The bottom half looks like a design challenge gone wrong—it’s just a piece of fabric wrapped around her waist—while the top half is lost completely on the stage. BOOT.

    My Top 3 Power Rankings

    Each week, I will rank who I think is going to be in the top 3 and those that are in the hunt. Here are my current predictions:

    1. Anetra: Few queens have dominated an episode of Drag Race as much as Anetra did this one. We see mixed results for queens who win the premiere (it seems either you make it to the finale or flame out midway through).
    2. Sasha Colby: I mean… like Sasha said in her entrance: period. She’s a legend, which usually doesn’t mean much on Drag Race. However, she’s a legend still in her prime. Plus, there doesn’t seem to be anything she can’t do.
    3. Mistress Isabelle Brooks: The narrator/commentator of the season usually doesn’t make the finale (see: Katya), but Mistress is shaping up to be more of a main character rather than a supporting role. She seems to be representing the traditional drag queen (as opposed to the TikTok queens) which I think gives her fuel.

    Heatseekers: Jax, Spice, Luxx Noir London

    Do you agree or disagree? Let me know on Twitter or Instagram.


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    Hey! I’m Karl. You can find me on Twitter and Letterboxd. I’m also a Tomatometer-approved critic.

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  • American Gods “The Bone Orchard” review — Perfectly cast and beautifully realized

    American Gods “The Bone Orchard” review — Perfectly cast and beautifully realized

    Neil Gaiman’s novel American Gods is adapted with care, but “The Bone Orchard” takes digressions that just make the series more timely and exciting than imagined.

    The first third of the book American Gods is an incredible exercise in world-building. It’s the kind of world-building that lends itself to a television show. It’s what made Game of Thrones such prime source material for HBO. So, as a fan of the book — though I certainly have my issues, I was really looking for the show to breathe life into some of its most iconic characters. And, thanks to its incredible cast, “The Bone Orchard” did that and then some.

    “The Bone Orchard” opens on a later chapter in the book where a group of Vikings arrives on the shores of America expecting to find prosperity. Instead, all they find is desolation and pain. It’s a violent and potentially polarizing way to start an already weird series, but I think it was an important decision to the success of this episode and, ultimately, of the series. American Gods is a book that lives in a subtext about why we worship and why we abandon who and what we worship. The Vikings’ plight on American soil tells us thematically what this series is going to be about. This first scene also sets the tone for the series — violent, dark, but also darkly funny. The majority of “The Bone Orchard” feels like a graphic novel. There are shots you can pull out and put onto a comic panel and this scene more than any enhances that.




    When we first see the series’ main protagonist Shadow Moon (Ricky Whittle) — a prisoner just days from release who discovers his wife has died, all I could think is that they nailed the casting. Shadow is one of the weaker elements of the book for me. He feels too defined by the recent events in his life. In this adaptation, Whittle brings some much-needed personality to the character. However, the star of these short prison scenes is Shadow’s fellow inmate Low Key Lyesmith (Jonathan Tucker). Tucker has a single monologue that tells you everything you need to know about the character while giving off a creepy vibe that carries on through the rest of the episode. If the opening scene set the series up thematically, then this scene sets the series up tonally.

    Ricky Whittle in "The Bone Orchard"

    Shadow’s interactions with Mr. Wednesday (the perfectly cast Ian McShane) and Mad Sweeney (Pablo Schreiber), though iconic in their own right, end up fading into the background of the more exciting elements of the episode. Though, it must be said that The Crocodile Bar scene was meticulously and beautiful realized all the way down to the jukebox. However, what stands out to me in these earlier scenes is Shadow’s interaction with his friend Robbie’s widow Audrey (Betty Gilpin). Although she is a minor character in the book and especially in the funeral scenes, she is larger than life in the series — possibly due to a Klonopin-induced stupor. Gilpin is a standout in an episode full of great performances. Her manic emotional swings are an essential juxtaposition to Shadow’s steely reaction to his wife’s death and revealed infidelity. The extended cemetery scene between Shadow and Audrey bring out the emotional turmoil that Shadow is going through more distinctly than the book. This emotional beat — in addition Gilpin’s performance — help us understand Shadow’s state of mind. He’s a man that is untethered to the world he knew.

    Brian Fuller and Michael Green, who created the series and co-wrote “The Bone Orchard”, made the essential decision to tackle two iconic scenes in this episode — the introductions of Bilquis and Technical Boy. So, let’s break it down starting with the Bilquis scene. In the book, this scene is the first interlude from the main story. It’s an incredible exercise in the genre elements of the book and Gaiman tackles it with so much poetic detail that it stands out as one of the more memorable scenes of the novel. Well, director David Slade brings the scene to life with the same finesse. The intimacy and pure sexual energy that were essential to the scene are both present here thanks to the performances by Yetide Badaki as Bilquis and Joel Murray as her suitor. However, David Slade’s lens frames this explicitly sexual scene with reverence for its purpose. It’s our first glimpse into the world of the gods and the idea of worship and it’s done intimately with bold choices that make the scene intense, but still a tender moment.




    Technical Boy’s introduction, on the other hand, is an intense and kinetic scene that finds Shadow attacked by a virtual reality helmet (similar to the way the face hugger in Alien attaches itself to its host). This digression from the book — in addition to the small detail of Bilquis finding her suitor on a dating app — updates the series in an essential way. While David Slade is the driving force behind the Bilquis scene, Bruce Langley brings Technical Boy to life in a way that deviates from the book by updating him to become the modern internet troll. Granted the production design has to be lauded. The conceptualization of his limo is somewhere I wouldn’t think to take it, but appropriate for the story and character. The scene ends up being more brutal than the book — Technical Boy’s henchmen The Children beat Shadow and string him up before he finally escapes. However, every change feels necessary, which is often difficult to defend to fans of the source material — just ask The Walking Dead.

    ★★★½ out of 5



    Watch “The Bone Orchard” and the first season of American Gods on Amazon!