Soundtracks of Television: ‘Impeachment: American Crime Story’
‘Impeachment: American Crime Story’ Soundtrack – A Vague Visages guide for every featured song in the FX series about the Bill Clinton-Monica Lewinsky scandal.
‘Impeachment: American Crime Story’ Soundtrack – A Vague Visages guide for every featured song in the FX series about the Bill Clinton-Monica Lewinsky scandal.
‘Impeachment: American Crime Story’ Cast: A Vague Visages guide for every main performer and character in the 2021 FX series.
‘Reservation Dogs’ Cast: A Vague Visages guide for every main performer and character in Sterlin Harjo’s FX on Hulu series.
“I think ‘Feud’ believes we should take another look, turn on another spotlight or two (or three, or four) and see people beyond the work… for all the things they are.”
“‘Feud’ may not be the most honest depiction of Joan Crawford and Bette Davis as human beings, but it provides an authentic depiction of the way it feels to be a woman trapped in a system that isn’t made for them or by them.”
“At its best, ‘Feud’ seeks to prove, and admirably so, that trash — as John Waters and William Castle can attest — is hardly the worst thing one can be.”
“While men may act as puppeteers — pulling all the strings, setting women up for failure — it is the women themselves who commit the most petty and egregious acts of terror.”
“Bette, Joan, the children, Victor… we all have a mother. And whether we like her or not, she has a part of us.”
“‘Feud’ seems to be driven as much by male insecurity and fear of failure as it does anything to do with the women.”
“Racism is, of course, the defining issue of discrimination in the O.J. case, but the show never lets us forget the misogyny which also haunts its characters.”
“Throughout the first three episodes, the writers appear to be struggling with the question of how funny it is to riff on the Kardashians’ eventual reality fame, and the opening of “The Dream Team” finds American Crime Story deciding, dubiously, that it’s hilarious.”
“Amidst the personal turmoil, the racial context of American Crime Story comes through even stronger in “The Run of His Life,” building on the insinuation of the Rodney King opening of the premiere.”
“Even removed from the extraterrestrials and murderous Midwestern crime families, the world of Fargo is a violent and disturbing one, and Hank attempts to do his part by creating an Esperanto-like universal language.”
“Like the film, as much as Fargo looks like it’s set in our universe, dashes of the absurd emphasize that the series works under its own logic.”
“Will Ed and Peggy get what they deserve? What do they deserve, exactly?”
“Throughout Season Two, Fargo has maintained an impeccable balance between comedy and tragedy.”
“One of the most impressive aspects of Fargo this season has been the show’s ability to digress without ever losing focus.”
“The voice of a fictional Ronald Reagan (played with a perfect mix of jocularity and sincerity by Bruce Campbell) looms over ‘The Gift of the Magi,’ setting a tone in the first act that never wanes throughout the episode.”
“In Noah Hawley’s show inspired by the Coen brothers’ work, a high body count and a willingness to laugh at it have been no less a part of the universe, in some ways serving as the most direct connection between the series and the film.”
“Gallows humor is a trademark of just about all of the Coens’ work (and Fargo in particular), and Noah Hawley and his writers have done a brilliant job of coming up with gags worthy of their show’s namesake.”