
‘Mad Men’ Avoids Ambiguity in Stellar Series Finale (TV REVIEW)
[rating=10.00] For months, AMC has touted the final episodes of Mad Men as “the end of an era” – an ending that coincides with both the figurative end to the fictional 1960s

[rating=10.00] For months, AMC has touted the final episodes of Mad Men as “the end of an era” – an ending that coincides with both the figurative end to the fictional 1960s

“Sleepover” offers a break from the (thoroughly enjoyable) onslaught of emotional, visceral messiness which defined the first chunk of Season Five.

[rating=10.00] First things first, just so that I am absolutely clear: Mad Max: Fury Road is a work of unmitigated genius, the likes of which you’ve never seen before. It’s

[rating=8.00] Far From the Madding Crowd is an adaptation you never asked for of a book you’ve never read, but under no circumstances should you let that dissuade you from

[rating=6.00] “Basic RV Repair and Palmistry” “Three weeks earlier,” is the first line uttered on this week’s Community. Though in most instances it would generally lead to a flashback of three

[rating=8.00] “Server Space” Things have been touch and go with the dudes at Pied Piper. After the death of Peter Gregory, and Gavin’s lawsuit, they finally seem to be heading in

[rating=8.00] “Kill the Boy” “A Targaryean alone in this world is a terrible thing.” While a seemingly disparate notion, Game of Thrones has been known to give a thematic nod to

Let’s have a roaring standing ovation for ‘Mad Men’’s penultimate episode, “The Milk and Honey Route,” which somehow managed to one-up last week’s installment in almost every way imaginable.

‘Louie’ is plagued by surreal, Lynchian nightmares in “Untitled.”

[rating=7.00] The D Train is a lowbrow, screwball comedy that successfully masquerades itself as highbrow festival fodder. It’s a fine line to walk, to be sure—the slightest misstep would prove