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Steven Universe Future Episode 10 Review: Prickly Pair

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Steven Universe has already hit the climax of its plot. Now we're getting the climax of its emotional core and it's perfect.

This Steven Universe Future review contains spoilers.

Steven Universe Future Episode 10 Review

Aha, you thought all those Watermelon Steven’s in earlier seasons of Steven Universe were pointless! No no, they were actually all just establishing his ability to create new versions of himself. I’m glad they did because Cactus Steven is without a doubt the show’s best metaphor so far.

Steven is dealing with a lot. After the events last episode he’s given up Little Homeschool and is instead focusing on gardening. This seems perfect but he’s worryingly naming all his plants after the people who are slowly leaving his life. Steven isn’t dealing with his emotions and he’s running punch drunk away from them as fast as possible.

It’s good Steven left Little Homeschool but now he’s in the darkest place possible, he has no purpose. At first Cactus Steven seems like the perfect distraction. A new friend to take care of! It’s what Steven’s always known. He’s comfortable with this… until he starts using Cactus Steven to finally vent out some of his negative self-talk.

He says the Gems don’t need him anymore. It’s obviously not true but Steven is in such a depth of despair he can’t believe anything but the worst… and Cactus Steven repeats it all back to him.

“Why do I need to be needed?”

Steven can’t bare to have his true thoughts heard by the Gems and tries to cover Cactus Steven’s mouth but he gets hurt in the process. This is where the episode really hits its stride. Cactus Steven is so perfect as a metaphor because, much like dealing with your own negative feelings and emotions, a cactus will hurt if you get too close. It’s easy to want to run and hide from those feelings after getting pricked. That’s what Steven does but he can’t help venting more negative feelings.

“I can’t tell Pearl how I feel cause she’ll blame herself and spiral out of control and I’ll have to pick up the pieces.”

That quote is very telling. Steven assumes that Pearl will be that way, disregarding all the growth she’s gone through. He puts the responsibility on himself that he has to deal with his problems because; he assumes wrongly, no one else can handle it. He frames it as caring about Pearl, that he’s just looking out for her but this removes Pearl’s entire agency. Maybe she would spiral out of control, maybe she wouldn’t but Steven is just using this logic to keep everyone away.

The more Steven denies help and keeps it all inside the worse Cactus Steven gets. The metaphor grows more obvious. Steven’s negative emotions are so big he can’t deal with it himself and he needs his friends, his family. Crucially though they can’t solve this problem for him. Steven has to take it into his own hands, which he literally does. Bristling against the pain, Steven hugs the personification of his own bad feelings and accepts them.

“I should have given you more of the love and kindness that you deserve.” 

Steven needs to give himself love and kindness. He needs that self-love. This first step was hard. It left him full of cactus spines, but it worked. Now he can’t put his problems away again, as represented by Cactus Steven running away. He can’t put him back in the dome. Steven has to confront himself… but can’t.

“Is there anything you need to talk about?”“I think I’ve said enough.

Steven isn’t quite there yet. He can’t talk to the people closest to him, the people he has so much baggage with. I don’t know where Steven will go from here but I hope he finds a therapist or some equivalent to speak to. He has a lot to get off his chest.

Steven Universe continues to prove it’s a masterpiece in emotional storytelling. This show was always focused on Steven as a character because it was always about how he grew and changed. Now, after the climax of the main series? We finally come to the true climax, or at least just before it, of what really mattered in the show.

Steven’s emotional health. I can’t wait to see where they go with it.

Keep up with all our Steven Universe Future news here!

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost in Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Shamus Kelley is a pop culture/television writer and official Power Rangers expert. Follow him on Twitter! He also co-hosts a Robotech podcast, which covers the original series and the new comics. Give it a listen! Read more articles by him here!

5/5
ReviewShamus Kelley
Steven Universe Future Episode 10 Prickly Pair
Dec 28, 2019

Steven Universe: Future Return Date, Cast, Trailer and News

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It's official! Steven Universe season 6 is really happening at Cartoon Network. Here is everything we know!

Steven Universe: The Movie seemed like it could have easily been the wrap up to the entire series but there's more to come! We've learned that Steven Universe will continue with Steven Universe season 6, titled Steven Universe: Future, and we've got the new opening theme below.

As you can hear it's an all new song featuring a shortened mix of 'Happily Ever After' from Steven Universe: The Movie! Cartoon Network also revealed this is a "new epilogue limited series." 

Steven Universe: Future Trailer

The first trailer for Steven Universe: Future is here and if you thought things would be chill for Steven this season? You're wrong! Pink Pearl? Jasper? Aqua Marine? We need more right now!

Steven Universe: Future Release Date

Steven Universe: Future is now on hiatus, with Cartoon Network airing a short message that said "The Story Continues on Cartoon Network." We've reached out to Cartoon Network for comment and we'll let you know if we hear anything back!

Steven Universe: Future Story

In a synopsis provided by Cartoon Network, Steven Universe: Futurewill focus on Steven finally dealing with many of his issues!

After saving the universe, Steven is still at it, tying up every loose end. But as he runs out of other people’s problems to solve, he’ll finally have to face his own.

 

read more: Steven Universe: The Essential Episodes

Steven Universe: Future Episodes

Steven Universe Future Episode 1 "Little Homeschool"

Welcome to Little Homeschool, a place on earth where Gems from all over the universe can come learn how to live together peacefully! But there's one Gem who refuses to attend.

Steven Universe Future Episode 2 "Guidance"

Amethyst has been helping Little Homeschool Gems find jobs on the boardwalk, but Steven isn't sure about her approach.

Steven Universe Future Episode 3 "Rose Buds"

Steven gets a surprise visit from some old friends, and an even more surprising introduction to some new ones. 

Steven Universe Future Episode 4 "Volleyball"

Steven is determined to help Pink Diamond's original Pearl heal the scar on her face. 

Steven Universe Future Episode 5 "Bluebird"

Steven questions the motives of a mysterious fusion that suddenly shows up at his house. 

Steven Universe Future Episode 6 "A Very Special Episode"

Rainbow Quartz 2.0 promised to hang out with Onion the same day Sunstone scheduled a home safety Geminar! How can Steven be in two places, and two fusions, at once? 

Steven Universe Future Episode 7 "Snow Day"

Steven and the Crystal Gems get a chance to catch up when they're all snowed in together. 

Steven Universe Future Episode 8 "Why So Blue?"

Steven has heard rumors of a pair of Gems that are still destroying worlds. If he can't stop them, maybe Lapis can.

Steven Universe Future Episode 9 "Little Graduation"

Steven and the Gems celebrate Little Homeschool's first graduating class. 

Steven Universe Future Episode 10 "Prickly Pair"

After leaving Little Homeschool, Steven has found a new hobby, plants. 

Thanks to the Futon Critic for the names and descriptions of these episodes!

Steven Universe: Future Cast

Thanks to the new opening we can be sure the entire cast of Steven Universe will be returning for Steven Universe: Future!

Steven Universe: Future Villains

From the opening theme we got a brief shot of what seem to be the villains for Steven Universe: Future. There are some things that look like watermelon Steven's, a Jasper, something that looks like an Aquamarine,, a snake-like creature (was Ronaldo right about SNEEPLE?), two Lapis Lazulis, and a White Diamond thing? We can't wait to find out more!

Keep checking back to Den of Geek for all things Steven Universe: Future. We'll update this article as we learn more! Don't forget to check out our list of the essential Steven Universe episodes!

Shamus Kelley is a pop culture/television writer and official Power Rangers expert. Follow him on Twitter! Read more articles by him here!

Steven Universe Season 6 Release Date Cast Story
NewsShamus Kelley
Dec 28, 2019

Sci Fi Fidelity: Van Helsing Showrunner Debriefs Season 4

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Jonathan Lloyd Walker breaks down a climactic Van Helsing season 4 and talks about his showrunner journey continuing into season 5.

Van Helsing has been a hidden gem on Syfy for four seasons now, and our reviews over the years have been overwhelmingly positive for this vampire apocalypse show. Although Jonathan Lloyd Walker took over as showrunner in the recently concluded season 4, the series didn’t miss a beat despite a shift in focus to different members of the Van Helsing clan. We spoke to Lloyd for the Sci Fi Fidelity podcast about his first experience helming a production and about the opportunities afforded by being renewed for a fifth and final season.

Having been both an actor and writer in many Vancouver-shot genre series for many years, Lloyd was happy to finally have the opportunity to steer the ship with Van Helsing season 4. “It’s been a great experience!” he says. “I obviously for a number of years have been the XO, the second in command, second seat as it’s often called in the business, and it’s been a great training ground for me to be able to get an opportunity to watch really talented showrunners execute the vision of a show and shape it in their own way. And so I was very eager to get that opportunity to do the same thing.”

It was a smooth transition for Van Helsing’s writing staff, of which Lloyd had been a part since the beginning. "Very fortunate for me, Neil Labute, who was the showrunner for the first few seasons of this… said to me after season two, ‘If this goes for awhile, and I think it will, I’m very much thinking that I’m just going to hand it off to you and move on and do some different things. Would you be interested?’ And it was a dream come true; it was exactly what I wanted,” says Lloyd. “So it’s been great!”

further reading: Tricia Helfer Talks Playing Dracula on Van Helsing, Creepshow

Those who have seen the Van Helsing season 4 finale know that its open-ended nature seemed to indicate that the show knew it was coming back. “It’s been a hard to keep secret for me for quite some time because when we were pretty much about halfway through season 4, I got a pretty strong indication that we were going to get a season 5 but that also season 5 would be the last season for the show,” Lloyd reveals in the podcast. “[It was] great to have the opportunity and the support from the network to bring a show full circle and bring it to an end.”

The podcast hosts recall their first conversation with Lloyd during his time as a writer on another show that was renewed for a final season, allowing the series to end on its own terms. “We got that fortunately with Continuum, and then I’m now going to get it again with Van Helsing,” says Lloyd. “So that enabled me to think ahead… what could I bake into season 4 to help tie in to what I think I’m going to do in season 5 and how I want to bring the show to a conclusion?”

The interview reveals many of the plot points that will lead into the finale season of Van Helsing in the full audio version on the Sci Fi Fidelity podcast. Be sure to subscribe so that you never miss an episode! Each week we review a currently airing show, discuss a topic of interest to genre television, or interview someone from behind the scenes of our favorite series. Find us in your podcast app of choice or simply listen below!

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Acast | RSS

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost in Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Michael Ahr is a writer, reviewer, and podcaster here at Den of Geek; you can check out his work here or follow him on Twitter (@mikescifi). Dave Vitagliano has been writing and podcasting about science fiction television since 2012. You can read more of his work here.

Charlotte Van Helsing in Van Helsing season 4
FeatureMichael AhrDave Vitagliano
Dec 29, 2019

Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10 Release Date, Trailer, and More

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HBO doesn't want to wait for another six years this time as Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10 is coming.

HBO will not be foisting Larry David on any other network. Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10 if officially happening.

The announcement came in a surprisingly painless fashion and much quicker than Curb Your Enthusiasm is accustomed to (though it was nearly two years ago, December 2017, at this point). Larry David tends to like to make the people wait. The gap between season 8 and season 9 was six full years. "As I’ve said many times, when one has the opportunity to annoy someone, one should do so," David said in a statement when the season was announced.

Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10 Release Date

Curb Your Enthusiasm returns on Sunday, January 19 for season 10. Larry will undoubtedly have some complaints.

Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10 Trailer

Now we finally have a teaser trailer for the upcoming 10th season. Larry, naturally, is too impatient to wait for the toaster to pop.

Season 9 started off a bit roughly but eventually reached creative highs thanks to its ongoing Fatwa! musical plotline and a two-episode guest appearance from Lin-Manuel Miranda.

If the show is able to continually attract guest stars of that caliber and keep up with modern trends just enough so that a cranky David may find the annoyances in them, there's certainly no reason to stop now. Season 9 ended with the kind of tongue-in-cheek cliffhanger that the show rarely follows up on so while it's funny to imagine Larry running away from the Ayatollah for eternity, there are still many more exasperated adventures to be found in sunny L.A.

Reload away, Larry. Someone has got to teach us all hotel cookie and buffet etiquette.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Alec Bojalad is TV Editor at Den of Geek and TCA member. Read more of his stuff here. Follow him at his creatively-named Twitter handle @alecbojalad

Curb Your Enthusiasm Season 10 on HBO
NewsAlec Bojalad
Dec 29, 2019

Fear the Walking Dead Season 6 Release Date, Cast, News, and More

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Fear the Walking Dead will return for season 6 on AMC in 2020.

Fear the Walking Deadwill return for season 6. The news was confirmed by showrunner Ian Goldberg during the show's SDCC 2019 panel. The news is not a surprise as Fear the Walking Deadis AMC's second most-watched series, averaging over 2 million viewers, according to THR

Fear the Walking Dead has seen its fair amount of change in the past few years after losing original showrunner Dave Erickson, who led the series into some really interesting stories that set it apart from its older sibling. Season 4 saw the arrival of new showrunners Andrew Chambliss and Ian Goldberg as well as star Lennie James, reprising his role as Morgan Jones. Morgan's journey to the world of the spinoff series meant some other big cast changes for the series, as it shifted focus from the Clark family, Fear the Walking Dead's original stars, to a whole new group of characters. 

Both Kim Dickens (Madison) and Frank Dillane (Nick) were killed off to make way for Maggie Grace's Althea, Garret Dillahunt's lovable John Dorie, and Jenna Elfman's June, and even Dwight (Austin Amelio) of The Walking Dead. The only remaining characters left from the original group are Alycia Debnam-Carey's tough-as-nails Alicia and Colman Domingo's delightful Victor Strand. 

Here is everything we know about Fear the Walking Dead season 6.

Fear the Walking Dead Season 6 Release Date

Fear the Walking Dead season 6 premieres in 2020. The show has usually arrived in the spring or summer, so expect the release date around that time.

Fear the Walking Dead Season 6 Cast

Zoe Colletti is joining the cast of Fear the Walking Dead Season 6 as a series regular, according to Deadline. While no specific details were provided, her character is said to be “a pivotal new role that will unfurl as the season progresses.” Colletti just had a big break as the star of 2019 horror book adaptation Scary Stories to Tell in the Dark, and fielded a TV run on Showtime crime series City on a Hill.

Additionally, the report reveals that the sixth season of the (first) spinoff series has granted series regular promotions to Mo Collins, who’s recurred since Season 4 as wisecracking trucker Sarah, and Colby Hollman, who was introduced in Season 5 as Wes, a wayward survivor with a proclivity for painting trees; a habit he’s given to Alicia, with whom he shared romantic vibes, only to be separated from her by the dictatorial post-apocalyptic Calamity Jane, Virginia (Colby Minifie).

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

John Saavedra is an associate editor at Den of Geek. Read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @johnsjr9 and make sure to check him out on Twitch.

Joseph Baxter is a contributor for Den of Geek and Syfy Wire. You can find his work here. Follow him on Twitter @josbaxter.

Fear the Walking Dead Season 6: Release Date, Cast, Trailer, and News
NewsJohn SaavedraJoseph Baxter
Dec 29, 2019

The Orville Season 3 Release Date, Episodes, Cast, Plot, and News

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The Orville Season 3 will boldly continue on Hulu. Here is everything we know about The Orville Season 3.

Through two seasons, The Orville is the little Star Trek homage that could. Like its (unofficial) Trekforefathers, The Orvillehas built up a small but formidable fanbase. Fox has rewarded that fanbase by ordering The OrvilleSeason 3...but it won't air on Fox.

Orville creator Seth MacFarlane announced during San Diego Comic-Con 2019 that the show will be moving to Hulu for Season 3. That's right. The Orville is no longer a Fox show. It is now a Hulu original. With Hulu itself being exclusively owned by Disney, just as the show's former network home of Fox, the shoe apparently fits.

Here is everything else we know about The Orville season 3.

The Orville Season 3 Release Date

It's not clear when The Orville season 3 premiere will happen...particularly with the move to Hulu. The first season arrived in the traditional September premiere window, while season two was held for midseason and didn't arrive until nearly January. Considering that this is an intricate, expensive show to produce, The Orville season 3 might be a better fit for midseason.

As Seth MacFarlane said of the move to Hulu:

The Orville has been a labor of love for me, and there are two companies which have supported that vision in a big way: 20th Century Fox Television, where I’ve had a deal since the start of my career, and FOX Broadcasting Company, now FOX Entertainment, which has been my broadcast home for over 20 years. My friends at the network understood what I was trying to do with this series, and they’ve done a spectacular job of marketing, launching and programming it for these past two seasons. But as the show has evolved and become more ambitious production-wise, I determined that I would not be able to deliver episodes until 2020, which would be challenging for the network. So we began to discuss how best to support the third season in a way that worked for the show. It’s exactly this kind of willingness to accommodate a show’s creative needs that’s made me want to stick around for so long. I am hugely indebted to Charlie Collier and FOX Entertainment for their generosity and look forward to developing future projects there. And to my new friends at Hulu, I look forward to our new partnership exploring the galaxy together."

The Orville Season 3 Episodes

Orville creator Seth MacFarlane revealed at NYCC 2019 that the show's episode order would be slightly smaller for season 3. The Orville season 3 will receive only 11 episodes on Hulu. The good news, however, is that those episodes stand to get a little longer, expanded by 10 minutes or more in some cases, according to a report from Cinemablend.

The Orville Season 3 Cast

In the latest news on The Orville's third season, the main cast is getting a new addition!

Anne Winters is joining The Orville Season 3 as a series regular, reported Deadline, which recently revealed that she will play a character named Charly Burke. Winters, an American actress, is coming off TV runs on ABC’s Grand Hotel, Netflix’s 13 Reasons Why and Go90’s Zac and Mia. She also fielded runs on FX’s Tyrant, ABC’s Wicked City and Freeform’s The Fosters, along with recent movie appearances in Night School and Mom and Dad.

The Orville was created by Family Guy’s Seth McFarlane, who will continue on as star of the show alongside Adrianna Palicki, Penny Johnson Jerald, Scott Grimes, and many others. The Orville Season 2 saw the departure of Halston Sage, who played Lt. Alara Kitan, from the cast, replaced by Jessica Szohr's Lt. Talla Keyali.

The Orville Season 3 Plot

Like many finales in the modern TV landscape, The Orville Season 2 finale could have served as both a fitting season or series end. There was a conclusive finish to the show's brief time travel arc and should the show get a third season, it will likely get right back to the story of The Orville and its diverse crew. Thankfully, it wasn't, and their adventures will continue.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Alec Bojalad is TV Editor at Den of Geek and TCA member. Read more of his stuff here. Follow him at his creatively-named Twitter handle @alecbojalad

Joseph Baxter is a contributor for Den of Geek and Syfy Wire. You can find his work here. Follow him on Twitter @josbaxter.

The Orville Season 3 Release Date Cast
NewsAlec Bojalad Joseph Baxter
Dec 29, 2019

Succession Season 3 Cast, Release Date, and News

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HBO has ordered Succession season 3, ensuring the Roy family will be gobbling up media conglomerates for another year.

Waystar/Royco and the Roy family will continue their awful ways as HBO has officially ordered Succession season 3. HBO made the announcement from its Medium PR account.

The Succession season 3 renewal came quite early for an HBO property, with HBO announcing the renewal as Succession season 2 was airing. Clearly, HBO likes what it sees from Succession's viewership numbers, not to mention the conversation it's been able to drive on social media. The official HBO account didn't have to dig deep for a Succession season 3 excitement meme.

Never change, Greg the egg.

“We are elated that Succession and its exploration of wealth, power and family has resonated so powerfully with audiences,” Francesca Orsi, Executive Vice President, HBO Drama Programming, said in a statement. “We cannot wait to see how the complex characters that Jesse Armstrong has created continue to navigate this captivating, ruthless world of the uber-rich. In today’s world where the intersection of politics and media is increasingly prevalent, Succession presents an especially piercing look behind the curtain of this elite, influential, and cutthroat community.”

further reading: Why Succession Deserves More Attention

Succession was created by Jesse Armstrong (In the Loop) and is produced by Armstrong, Adam McKay, Will Ferrell, Frank Rich, Kevin Messick, Jane Tranter, Mark Mylod, Tony Roche and Scott Ferguson. After a slow start to its first season, it has become a much buzzed about comedy-drama hybrid about a uniquely hateable, yet also kind of likeable rich family.

Succession Season 3 Cast

Expect the full Roy family to return in Succession season 3. That includes Logan Roy (Brian Cox) and his children Kendall (Jeremy Strong), Connor (Alan Ruck), Shiv (Sarah Snook), Roman (Kieran Culkin). There are also plenty of corporate hangers on at Waystar/Royco like Gerri (J. Smith-Cameron) and Karl (David Rasche). Surprisingly, everyone came out of the Succession season 3 finale ok so it should be a full cast for season 3. Plus, there is always an opportuntity for guest actors to join like Holly Hunter did in season 2.

Succession Season 3 Release Date

There is no word on a Succession season 3 release date yet though for two seasons, it has been a major part of HBO's summer plans.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Alec Bojalad is TV Editor at Den of Geek and TCA member. Read more of his stuff here. Follow him at his creatively-named Twitter handle @alecbojalad

Succession Season 3 Release Date Cast News
NewsAlec Bojalad
Dec 29, 2019

Rick and Morty Season 4 Episodes, Release Date, Cast, Reviews

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Rick and Morty Season 4 is halfway over. Here's everything you need to know, from the return date to episode details.

After a long hiatus, Rick and Morty Season 4 is finally almost here. And it's just the beginning for Rick and Morty and Adult Swim.

Series co-creator Justin Roiland broke the news about Rick and Morty's future with an Instagram post. The illustration states that 70 more episodes of Adult Swim's Rick and Morty are on the way. Going by last season's 10 episodes, that's potentially seven more seasons of Rick and Morty.

The official word from the network states that "Adult Swim has made a long-term overall deal with the creators that will include 70 new episodes of the critically acclaimed series that follows a sociopathic genius scientist who drags his inherently timid grandson on insanely dangerous adventures across the universe." 

Rick and Morty season 4 finds the show back at the height of its powers. Read more about it in our spoiler free review of the first episode.

Here's everything else we know about the Rick and Morty season 4... 

Rick and Morty Season 4 Episode Guide

Rick and Morty season 4 will feature 10 episodes, split up into two parts. We'll update this with new info and links to reviews as it all becomes available.

Rick and Morty Season 4 Episode 1 - Edge of Tomorty: Rick, Die Repeat

air date: 11/10/19

Read our review of "Edge of Tomorty: Rick, Die, Repeat" here.

Rick and Morty Season 4 Episode 2: The Old Man and the Seat

air date: 11/17/19

Read our review of "The Old Man and the Seat" right here.

Rick and Morty Season 4 Episode 3: One Crew over the Crewcoo's Morty

air date: 11/24/19

Read our review of "One Crew over the Crewcoo's Morty" right here.

Rick and Morty Season 4 Episode 4 - Claw and Hoarder: Special Ricktim's Morty

air date: 12/8/19

Read our review of "Claw and Hoarder: Special Ricktim's Morty" right here.

Rick and Morty Season 4 Episode 5: Rattlestar Ricklactica

air date: 12/15/19

Read our review of "Rattlestar Ricklactica" right here

The next batch of episodes after these will arrive in 2020.

Rick and Morty Season 4 Release Date

The first half of Rick and Morty season 4 is over. Now the wait begins. We expect more episodes will air in 2020, but we've been hurt before.

We'll update this post when there's an official premiere date for the next batch of new episodes.

Rick and Morty Season 4 Cast

Each season of Rick and Morty has the same relatively sparse cast. That's what happens when your creator (Justin Roiland) also voices the two main characters among countless other folks. Expect Sarah Chalke, Chris Parnell, and Spencer Grammer to return and fill out the roles of the Smith/Sanchez family.

Harmon and Roiland also revealed to EW that Paul Giamatti, Sam Neil, Taika Waititi, and Kathleen Turner are set to guest star in the new season.

We’ll keep you posted on more Rick and Morty season 4 news as we get it.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Rick and Morty Season 4 Release Date Trailer Episodes Cast News
NewsChris Longo
Dec 29, 2019

Westworld Season 3 Release Date, Cast, Trailer, Story, and News

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Westworld Season 3 is to be "a whole new world." And now we know it won't look like the past two seasons.

Violent delights may have violent ends, but Westworld’s enticements are in no danger of being cut off from their source, even after an aborted robo-apocalypse in the park of dreams turned it into a nightmare. Which is happy news for us, cowboy. Westworld Season 3 was confirmed early during the second season's run. And we're getting intriguing new teases about it to this day.

Westworld is adopting quite new look for season 3 with huge casting changes and a big setting migration. Here is everything we know about Westworldseason 3.

Westworld Season 3 Release Date

HBO has confirmed that Westworld season 3 will arrive at some point in the first half of 2020.

further reading: Westworld Was the First Draft of Jurassic Park

Westworld Season 3 Trailer

"The future is powered by you...and we know you," says a voice in a creepy new corporate ad for Westworld season 3. "With Incite, the only choice you'll have to make is us."

A new Westworld trailer premiered at SDCC 2019! Watch it below:

Right before the Game of Thrones Season 8 finale aired, HBO revealed the first Westworld Season 3 trailer, set to Pink Floyd's "Brain Damage." If you didn't notice, we're no longer in Sweetwater, Toto.

Westworld Season 3 Cast

The most internet waves-making casting for season 3 has been of course Breaking Bad's Aaron Paul getting cast as a series regular. Offering the chance to help lead a "repilot" for season 3, Paul plays a disillusioned malcontent living in this show's version of the future. Perhaps this is why we know he's a thief in his world, but he might become something more when he catches the eye of Dolores.

Lena Waithe (The Chi) will appear in Westworld Season 3. It's unknown what role she will be playing but it's expected to involve the incoming conflict between robots/hosts and humanity. French actor Vincent Cassel (Irreversible, Black Swan, Ocean's Thirteen) is also cast in an unknown role that is credited for all 10 episodes.

further reading: Westworld Season 2 Timelines Explained

With the fate of so many of the main cast members' characters up in the air come the end of Season 2, Westworld could do a major reset in Season 3. Either way, Paul is credited with appearing in all 10 episodes of season 3. And of course Evan Rachel Wood, Tessa Thompson, Thandie Newton, and Jeffrey Wright will all play major roles. Also, perhaps to your surprise given the second season ending, Ed Harris' Man in Black will also be returning, as will Katja Herbers as his daughter (or at least a replica of her since, well, you know....).

Scott Mescudi and Marshawn Lynch also have key roles.

Westworld Season 3 Story

As you've already gathered from the Westworld Season 3 trailer, we are in a "whole new world." This is hardly a surprise though since Westworld showrunners Joy and Jonathan Nolan sat down with The Hollywood Reporter back during the end of the second season to say that season 3 would offer the opportunity to explore the perspective of a species with a nigh-immortal lifespan. At that point, characters can start thinking about things in the span of eons as opposed to years.

"I think it's a radical shift," Nolan said. "What's compelling and appealing about these characters is that they're not human. As we said in the show, humans are bound by the same loops the hosts are, in some ways even smaller. You couldn't expect human characters to withstand and survive the kind of story that we're telling. The hosts have a different version of mortality, a different outlook. I think clearly with Dolores, as she's laid out, there is a longer view here, a larger set of goals. They're existential. They span eons."

further reading: Westworld Season 2 Ending Explained

This ties in with our previous theories about season 3 potentially expanding its timelines to include events hundreds, if not thousands, of years in the future. This was hinted at during the post-credits scene of the season 2 finale. Joy likewise calls season 3 an opportunity to "repilot" the series, and that includes the new direction taken by Tessa Thompson's character.

In the season 2 finale, Thompson's Charlotte Hale was killed with extreme prejudice by Dolores, who had then assumed her visage. Yet by the end of season 2, Dolores is back in a model based on her original body, and the Charlotte Hale clone played by Thompson was a mystery character. Joy also touched on what that could look like in season 3.

Says Joy, "So we always knew that we were going to do this reveal and let her expand into this new role. We have a very diabolical arc for her planned out. Part of the fun for the character will be self-realization. She will be realizing the things we know about who she is."

And if you're wondering whether Westworld is going to go full Lost on us, Joy also sought to nix that notion in a more recent interview:

“We have an ending in mind; we’ve had it from the pilot. It’s very emotional, I think. I can’t tell you exactly when that ending will come… but I think for every season what we try to do is tell a chapter of the story that gives you closure and then opens a door to a new chapter…The overarching question of the series is, what will become of this new lifeform? So I feel it would be irresponsible to not have an end goal in mind.”

You can find all our Westworld coverage right here.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Alec Bojalad is TV Editor at Den of Geek and TCA member. Read more of his stuff here. Follow him at his creatively-named Twitter handle @alecbojalad

Westworld Season 3 Release Date Cast Trailer Story
NewsDavid CrowAlec Bojalad
Dec 29, 2019

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 13 Review: Breakout

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The two-part Kaz/Norath saga concludes in the most average, blandest, basic way possible on Star Wars Resistance.

This Star Wars Resistance review contains spoilers.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2

So it looks like “Breakout” is indeed the second and final part to last week’s episode, and taken together, “The Missing Agent” and “Breakout” are, as usual, a fine, fairly mediocre pair of episodes that don’t do much but provide a generic, average adventure. There really is so little here to get into–every issue and conflict is solved just as you would expect, mostly because characters verbalize their ideas and plans (mostly in really bad “comedic” scenes), then just… execute them, with very few problems and even fewer moments of tension.

Nothing is bad per se, but everything is so uninspired. The only moment that seems to possess any spark is when Kaz stuns Commander Pyre. It’s a sudden move, and pretty humorous! Nothing comes of it though. Is it much of a surprise that I actually forgot about that moment until I started writing this review a few days after seeing this episode?

Truth be told, it feels like all the villains have gotten either too soft or too evil. Pyre being knocked out but not really responding to it feels like a missed opportunity–sure, he shouldn’t take it personally, but it would be cool to see him unload a little more. And Agent Tierney? She always seemed like a smarter, “two-steps-ahead” kind of commander, but her most clever act is trying to bait Yeager by teasing him about how much Tam hates them now (Yeager doesn’t buy it), and then just constantly telling her troops to torture CB-23 until he gives up information. Where’s her keen sense of manipulation? Any sense of her skillset? CB breaks out of his torture restraints so easily (how is there only one Stormtrooper left in that room?) and then takes out Tienry with ease. So much for her character amounting to anything.

In fact, CB does everything this episode. He escapes his own torture prison, he retains all the data about the Resistance information and gathered secrets, and he even quite intelligently takes out Ax with the shuttle–first by ramming into him, then turning the booster rockets on him (the episode keeps things vague for S&P purposes but I think its safe to say Ax was fried). Why even keep Kaz around? Honestly, I’m only being half-facetious. Kaz’s goofy, half-heartedness is only mildly entertaining at this point, and he lacks any type of commitment, or clarity of purpose, or goals, or anything.

read more - Star Wars Resistance: 8 Best Episodes

As mentioned last week, Norath’s appearance is meant to be a foil to Kaz, but I don’t think he functions as the creators may have intended. I want to watch The Norath Show now, because at least he has a driven sense of purpose. Kaz refusing to join/help Norath at the end exemplifies this: sure, Kaz has his loyalty to his friends on the Colossus, but could he also do something outside of volunteering? He’s not interested in anything, nor really has a specific value or skillset anymore. He’s boring. It’s all so boring.

Case in point: Kaz and Norath spend a lot of time sneaking around … a lot of time, to which even Norath lampshades how all they’re doing is sneaking around and wasting time (hint, hint). So they finally do the thing that has been obvious from the beginning: they knock out a few Stormtroopers and take their uniforms. Well, they try to, which includes an eye-rolling interlude with a random alien citizen. And look, I haven’t seen The RIse of Skywalker yet, but by all accounts, it's just so… run-of-the-mill, and I couldn’t help but think about that when watching these Kaz/Norath scenes.

When they finally take down those Stormtroopers, the citizen just throws fruit at them and literally shakes his fist. When an actual Stormtrooper walks by Kaz and Norath while they’re in their ill-fitting disguises, the Stormtrooper scoffs out a curt “Rookie,” then keeps on walking. Is… is this it? Is that the best we’re going to get? That alien citizen and that Stormtrooper could have said or done anything else, but those responses are so cookie-cutter, so boring, that it’s hard to believe that these writers are doing nothing but cashing in quick scripts to pad for time and make a quick buck. Back in Star Wars Rebels’ final season, they had a droid singing in space. It made no sense, but it was ridiculously bold. Resistance will never have that, but it can’t even try to push things a little?

This review is harsh, and I don’t mean it to be. The episode on its own is fine. Torra suggests a plan to save everyone, and her father refuses at first, but then they just do the plan. I guess that was supposed to be a “gotcha” moment, but it’s just another obvious beat you could see coming a mile away. The episode also has a lot of winking bits–Kaz saying “I have a bad feeling about this,” Neeku commenting on the uselessness of Stormtroopers uniforms–and that’s all well and good. But it isn’t particularly unique, exciting, funny, or memorable. I’m just going to coast through the rest of this season since the writers are going to do the same. “Breakout” is just not a breakout episode.

Keep up with Star Wars Resistance season 2 news and reviews here.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

2/5
ReviewKevin Johnson
Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 13 Breakout
Dec 29, 2019

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 News, Reviews, and Episode Guide

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Star Wars Resistance season 2 is airing right now. Here's everything you need to know about the final batch of episodes.

Star Wars Resistance season 2 is set for liftoff, according to Disney. The show was renewed midway through the first season, which sees Kazuda Xiono, a young pilot turned Resistance spy, investigate a station called the Colossus and its connections to the First Order. Along the way, he makes a few friends and participates in high-stakes races with a pretty junky ship called the Fireball (she's got it where it counts, though). 

The show, which is set years after Return of the Jedi and just before The Force Awakens, has plenty of connections to Episode VII. The valiant Poe Dameron plays a supporting role on the show as Kazuda's mentor while Captain Phasma leads her forces in the days before her mission to Jakku. General Hux and Starkiller Base have also appeared on the series. As an extension of the Sequel Trilogy, Kazuda's journey hasn't quite been the revealing interquel fans might have been hoping for, but for those who just want to watch plenty of Star Wars starfighter action, Resistance is the show for you. 

Renowned Lucasfilm Animation veteran Dave Filoni (Star Wars Rebels) created the series while Athena Portillo, Justin Ridge, and Brandon Auman serve as executive producers. Amy Beth Christenson is the art director. 

Here's everything else you need to know about the show:

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episodes

Here's where we'll compile episode titles, official synopses, and reviews as they become available. Click the titles to go to the full reviews.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 1: Into the Unknown

Having been launched into space by Kaz and crew, the Colossus is having engineering problems, which are made all the more worse by a mysterious stowaway.

Air Date: 10/6/19

Read our review of "Into the Unknown."

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 2: A Quick Salvage Run

With the Colossus in need of hyperfuel, Kaz suggests they take it from a downed First Order ship; the salvage mission is quickly compromised when the First Order shows up.

Air Date: 10/13/19

Read our review of "A Quick Salvage Run."

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 3: Live Fire

Kaz officially joins the Aces, as does Yeager -- who trains them to become better combat pilots; Tam learns what it's like to be a First Order pilot.

Air Date: 10/20/19

Read our review of "Live Fire."

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 4: Hunt on Celsor 3

The pirates volunteer to find food for the Colossus, but Kaz doesn't trust them; Kaz and Torra go on the hunt, but run into big problems.

Air Date: 10/27/19

Read our review of "Hunt on Celsor 3."

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 5: The Engineer

Kaz and Neeku discover Nena, a Nikto engineer in need of assistance who barely escaped a First Order attack.

Air Date: 11/3/19

Read our review of "The Engineer."

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 6: From Beneath

Flix takes Kaz and crew to his home world to acquire fuel from his family's refinery, only to discover the family's drilling has awoken something monstrous.

Air Date: 11/10/19

Read our review of "From Beneath."

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 7: The Relic Raiders

When Kaz and team arrives on a mysterious planet to buy supplies, they find the outpost has been abandoned and a secret Sith Temple has been raised.

Air Date: 11/17/19

Read our review of "The Relic Raiders" here.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 8: Rendezvouz Point

Doza attempts to meet a Resistance pilot from his past, but the pilot has been captured by the First Order.

Air Date: 11/24/19

Read our review of "Rendezvous Point" here.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 9: The Voxx Vortex 5000

With the Colossus running out of money, Hype risks everything by taking the Aces to race at Vranki's Casino, run by Vranki the Hutt.

Air Date: 12/1/19

Read our review of "The Voxx Vortex 5000" here.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 10: Kaz's Curse

A pirate curses Kaz, causing him danger at every turn; Kaz is soon forced to seek Mika Grey for help, but Kaz's curse gets worse when the Guavian Death Gang appears.

Air Date: 12/7/19

Read our review of "Kaz's Curse" here.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 11: Station to Station

Kaz and Neeku sneak onto a First Order refueling station in order to take an important piece of tech, but their plans go awry when they run into Tam and Gen. Hux.

Air Date: 12/15/19

Read our review of "Station to Station" here.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 12: The Missing Agent

Kaz, Yeager and Synara trace a distress call to a planet where a Resistance agent has gone missing; things only get worse as a mysterious bounty hunter starts hunting them.

Air Date: 12/22/19

Read our review of "The Missing Agent" here.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Episode 13: Breakout

Kaz and Norath try to help their friends while being pursued by a deadly bounty hunter.

Air Date: 12/29/19

Read our review of "Breakout" here.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Trailer

A clip from Star Wars Resistance season 2 has dropped online. Watch it below:

If you need a refresher on what happened last season, Disney also posted a season 1 recap video:

And here's the first trailer:

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Cast

The voice cast includes Christopher Sean (Days of Our Lives) as Kazuda Xiono, Suzie McGrath (East Enders) as Tam Ryvora, Scott Lawrence (Legion) as Jarek Yeager, Myrna Velasco (Elena of Avalor) as Torra Doza, Josh Brener (Silicon Valley) as Neeku Vozo, Donald Faison (Scrubs) as Hype Fazon, Jim Rash (Community) as Flix, Bobby Moynihan (DuckTales) as Orka, Oscar Isaac (Star Wars: The Last Jedi) as Poe Dameron, and Gwendoline Christie (Game of Thrones) as Captain Phasma.

And check out the guest stars!

Joe Manganiello (Magic Mike) as Ax Tagrin, Daveed Diggs (Hamilton) as Norath Kev, Matthew Wood (The Clone Wars) as Kylo Ren, Lucy Lawless (Xena: Warrior Princess) as the Aeosian Queen. Elijah Wood (The Lord of The Rings) as Rucklin; Liam McIntyre (Spartacus) as Commander Pyre; Jason Hightower (Victor & Valentino) as Captain Doza; and Sumalee Montano (Kung Fu Panda: The Paws of Destiny) as Agent Tierny.

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Story

Here's the official synopsis:

"The story picks up after a harrowing escape from the First Order, as the Colossus and all its residents find themselves lost in space, pursued by Agent Tierny and Commander Pyre. Kaz and team also face a myriad of new dangers along the way including bounty hunters, a suspicious Hutt, General Hux and Supreme Leader Kylo Ren. Meanwhile, Tam grapples with her future and where her true allegiance lies, with her friends or the First Order. The thrilling final season will showcase how the unlikeliest of heroes can help spark hope across the galaxy."

We'll keep you updated on more Star Wars Resistance season 2 news as we learn it! Until then, here's everything you need to know about Episode IX

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Poster

Take a look at the poster released at this year's Star Wars Celebration Chicago!

Listen to the latest Star Wars Blaster Canon podcast:

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Acast | RSS

John Saavedra is an associate editor at Den of Geek. Read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @johnsjr9

Star Wars Resistance Season 2 Release Date, Trailer, Cast, News
NewsJohn Saavedra
Dec 29, 2019

Shameless Season 10 Episode 8 Review: Debbie Might Be A Prostitute

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Many of the Gallaghers must confront their pasts and seriously think about their futures in a particularly entertaining Shameless.

This Shameless review contains spoilers.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 8

“Why would you want to do good?”

Shameless season 10 has been rife with change, but “Debbie Might Be A Prostitute” sees many characters wrestling with serious decisions about their futures as they also come to terms with their past. As the episode’s title indicates, Debbie finds herself at a certain crossroads, but every Gallagher here has to really look at who they are and what they want for themselves. This is an act that’s easier for some than others, but it leads to a very big episode of Shameless that’s not afraid to shake things up.

Ian and Mickey’s situation is by far the most interesting of everyone’s problems. The previous episode of Shameless ends with Mickey flippantly joking that they should kill their parole officer and this installment begins with her getting thrown out a window to her death (in what’s actually a very well done sequence). Mickey denies having killed her, but Ian can’t help but connect the dots, as well as being very familiar with how the Milkovichs handle their problems. 

It’s a very difficult scenario for the both of them that truly tests their relationship in an unexpected way. It’s even better when the audience learns that Mickey didn’t do it and is just as suspicious of Ian as he is of him. While it’s disappointing that they both suspect the other one of murder, it’s encouraging that both of their instincts here are to perfect their partner. 

This strange tragedy unites them in an unusual way and nearly acts as the odd impetus for their marriage. Cleverly, the resolution of the murder causes Ian and Mickey to look at their relationship from different angles and figure out what they really want here and the blowout is crushing. It’s so sad to see that Mickey really is committed here while Ian is the one that has larger issues to work out.

A great touch here that’s consistent throughout the whole episode is that Ian comes to Lip for help on what to do. The Gallaghers are at their best when they’re working together as a unit. Everyone has a tendency to get lost in their own worlds, but “Debbie Might Be A Prostitute” properly has this family come to one another for support instead of suffering alone.

With the death of Rachel Dratch’s character, let’s also just take a second to appreciate the guest stars that Shameless has pulled together this season. Rachel Dratch’s character may be the worst, but the actress was having so much fun in this role. The addition of Constance Zimmer and Elizabeth Rodriguez—as well as Luis Guzman earlier—as flawed, unusual characters holds a lot of promise. Characterization is sometimes a mess for the main characters, but Shameless is still a good place for actors to get a chance to shine in eccentric guest arcs. 

As Ian and Mickey experience some significant cracks in their foundation, Frank continues to bond with Faye as their unusual whirlwind romance only intensifies. Faye becomes more of an enigma to Frank when he learns that she’s not in fact homeless (which is revealed in a hysterical manner). Frank tries to figure out just exactly what’s going on with Faye, but their love still feels even more unfettered than before. All of this takes an unpredictable turn when Elizabeth reveals she lives in a haunted house, which actually sounds like it’s literally Frank’s dream home. Quickly this love story begins to turn into the ultimate grift.

This material is still steeped in the dark idea of Frank taking advantage of a vulnerable person, but with how broad and crazy Shameless has been this season I honestly wouldn’t have been surprised if a real ghost did show up and temporarily possess Frank or something. There of course aren’t any ghosts, but the conclusion is far more satisfying as Elizabeth turns the tables on Frank and reveals that this has all been a long con against him. 

Elizabeth actually shares a connection to Frank’s past and her fiancé was wrongfully sent to prison for nearly 25 years because of Frank’s negligence. As broad as ghosts would be, Elizabeth going all experimental surgery on Frank and wrapping him up in a torture porn is nearly as out there, but at least there’s more thematic resonance in this plot.

Frank’s actions are terrible and the hostage situation he’s stuck in carries a lot of weight, but there are so many people’s lives that Frank has ruined throughout Shameless’ ten seasons that this would have had more impact if Elizabeth were engaged to someone we have an actual connection with rather than someone who pre-dates the series. When a show has been on for this long, pulling out minor characters from the first or second season could even be a compelling way to explore just how much actions can have consequences over time. This episode still touches on those themes, but there’s a disconnected nature here that would have been so easy to rectify. Frank’s current problem is predicated on manipulation and misunderstanding, which isn’t a far cry from Debbie’s current lot.

read more: Kavalier and Clay TV Show Coming to Showtime

After the innocent misunderstanding that happened with Debbie last week, she continues to spend time with her new friend, Claudia, and seriously considers if sex work is the right direction for her life. She dismisses the notion sooner than later, but she’s still enamored with Claudia. They have a difficult time finding the right dynamic to their relationship, but it all comes from a very sweet place and it looks like Claudia might actually be a really positive presence for Debbie during what's been a very destructive time as of late. So many characters jump through extravagant hoops throughout this episode to get what they want from their partner, but Debbie and Claudia’s story turns out to be one that’s the most genuine in the end.

Right after Lip and Tami are able to feel comfortable as new parents they have to start thinking about who would be a guardian for Freddie if they were out of the picture. The decision over who should look after Freddie in case of emergency causes a schism between Tami and Lip. Even though no one in Tami’s family appeals to Lip, she’s at least thought about the question as opposed to him. 

At the same time, her easy dismissal of Ian feels a little slight. So much of their story is presented through Lip’s perspective that it's important to remember that Tami has gotten a ton thrown at her and is still likely raw from the birth. Tami’s aunt starts to weasel her way into their life and look after Freddie, but none of this ever reaches much of a fever pitch or gets too dramatic.

The only Gallagher who’s not wrapped up in some kind of relationship drama is Carl, who instead embraces the positivity that he brought forward in his effort to improve the community. This sense of self-worth grows strong in Carl and while it may express itself in some unconventional ways, he at least has the best of intentions with the change that he’s trying to enact. The results are already a little messy but hopefully his youth group won’t turn into a full-on militia.

V and Kevin expressed certain financial concerns in the previous episode, but here the universe continues to bend over backwards for them, only for them to waste the opportunity. Kevin and V fall into nearly $1000 from a tax rebate and they argue over what would be the best use of this cash. Out of all of the terrible ways in which they could blow this money, they get roped into a particularly awful pyramid scheme. Don’t worry though, they’re now in the hemorrhoid cream business so everything’s going to be just fine.

“Debbie Might Be A Prostitute” has a lot to work through and faces an uphill task, but the episode has a very well written script that contains some fantastic dialogue, makes a lot of tiny decisions that are smart, and features some very funny gags and payoffs. Even if all of the larger beats don’t connect, Molly Smith Metzler’s script really captures these characters well and turns this into one of the more enjoyable episodes of the season. As contrived as many of these storylines are, Metzler gets the most out of them and finds ways to make them work within their restrictions.

Oh, and Liam's managing some rising basketball player and killing it in the sponsorship department. Yeah, I don't know either.

Keep up with Shameless season 10 news and reviews here.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Daniel Kurland is a published writer, comedian, and critic whose work can be read on Den of Geek, Vulture, and Bloody Disgusting. Daniel knows that the owls are not what they seem, that Psycho II is better than the original, and that Hannibal is the greatest love story ever told. His perma-neurotic thought process can be followed at @DanielKurlansky.

4/5
ReviewDaniel Kurland
Shameless Season 10 Episode 8 Debbie Might be a Prostitute
Dec 29, 2019

Shameless Season 10 Episode 8 Trailer, News, Reviews, and Episode Guide

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The Gallaghers are back on Showtime for Shameless Season 10 sans Fiona.

It’s a minor miracle the Gallaghers have managed to stay together for this long. After nine seasons, the Showtime hit has lost two family members, Emmy Rossum (Fiona) and Cameron Monaghan (Ian), but not for too long in the latter's case, as Ian Gallagher will be returning for at least a sizable amount of Shameless Season 10, which will carry on without Rossum and with William H. Macy, despite the latter's recent PR woes.

further reading: Shameless Showrunner Talks Life After Emmy Rossum

In a previous statement, Showtime president Gary Levine said: “The Gallaghers are a force of nature, and they are coming back. Shameless, with its ever-growing fan base, is like no other show on television. We are thrilled it will live on with its unique blend of love and larceny on Showtime."

Shameless Season 10 Episode 9 Trailer

The next episode of Shamelessseason 10 is episode 9, titled "O Captain, My Captain." It airs on Jan. 5 at 9 p.m. ET. Here's a trailer:

Shameless Season 10 Episode Guide

Shameless Season 10 Episode 1: We Few, We Lucky Few, We Band of Gallaghers

Frank milks his injury for all its worth; Debbie cooks up a scam of her own; Lip and Tami get a surprise; Carl returns home from military school; Liam faces an identity crisis.

air date: 11/10/19

read our review of "We Few, We Lucky Few, We Band of Gallaghers" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 2: Sleep Well My Prince For Tomorrow You Shall Be King

Frank sets out to make money to keep his place in the house; Lip is overwhelmed by the demands of a newborn; Carl learns more about his mysterious new coworker; Ian and Mickey struggle to keep the romance alive in prison.

air date: 11/17/19

read our review of "Sleep Well My Prince For Tomorrow You Shall Be King" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 3: Which America?

Frank revels in his new position in the Gallagher house; Lip looks for support as the pressures of fatherhood take their toll; Ian and Mickey make a decision about their future; Carl tries to woo Anne despite Lori's efforts to get in his way.

air date: 11/24/19

read our review of "Which America?" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 4: A Little Gallagher Goes a Long Way

Frank and Mikey set off on a day of adventure around the city in pursuit of Mikey's dreams. Debbie discovers a new way to make money in the midst of a strike as Lip leans on his new friend for parenting advice.

air date: 12/1/19

read our review of "A Little Gallagher Goes a Long Way" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 5: Sparky

Frank hatches the idea for a new scheme when an unexpected visitor shows up at the Gallagher house. With Tami back in the house, Lip struggles to give up control of Fred. Ian returns home and is thrown in with a corrupt parole officer.

air date: 12/8/19

read our review of "Sparky" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 6: Adios Gringos

Frank and Liam get wined and dined by potential baby buyers. Carl comes up with a strategy to protect Anne's family business, and Ian gets on Paula's bad side. Backed into a corner, Debbie fights to protect Franny from Pepa.

air date: 12/15/19

read our review of "Adios Gringos" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 7: Citizen Carl

Carl embraces his civic duty. Debbie searches for her next payday. Frank meets the woman of his dreams. Ian and Mickey get roped into a dangerous scam. When tragedy strikes the Alibi, Kev and V go undercover to find new customers.

air date: 12/22/19

read our review of "Citizen Carl" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 8: Debbie Might Be a Prostitue

Debbie weighs the pros and cons of a new career. Frank uncovers the truth about Faye's living situation. A miscommunication between Ian and Mickey has disastrous consequences and Lip. Tami disagrees over who should be taking care of Fred.

air date: 12/29/19

read our review of "Debbie Might Be a Prostitute" here.

Shameless Season 10 Episode 9: O Captain, My Captain

Frank goes back in time to uncover his connection to Faye, as Debbie's day with Claudia's daughter goes awry. Carl takes extreme measures to toughen up his new group of cadets. Ian struggles to connect with Mickey after their blowup.

air date: 1/5/19

Shameless Season 10 Episode 10: Now Leaving Illinois

An incident in the Tamietti family presents Lip and Tami with a new opportunity. Faye's betrayal lands Frank in front of a judge. Mickey's antics drive Ian to online dating. Carl makes an unexpected discovery at his new job.

air date: 1/12/19

Shameless Season 10 Episode 11: Location, Location, Location

Frank finds a cushy place to make his new home. Lip gets cold feet when Tami moves forward with a plan for their future. Ian sees a new side of Mickey, and Debbie's love triangle reaches a breaking point.

air date: 1/19/19

Shameless Season 10 Release Date

Shameless Season 10 premiered on Nov. 10 at 9 pm ET. It will serve as a lead-in for Kidding Season 2 at 10 pm. Showtime made the annoucement at the 2019 Summer TCA press tour.

Shameless Season 10 Cast

Fiona’s absence will be felt in season 10; she was the effective head of the household for most of Shameless’ run. Rossum told fans before the season 9 began that this would be her swansong. Monaghan withheld that information until right before his final episode aired in October.

However, he has quickly changed his direction, as well as Ian's, as Monaghan has returned to being a series regular in season 10. He revealed to the TCA (via The Hollywood Reporter) that he had stepped away for creative and business reasons, but is happy to be back now. Says the actor, "I took some time away and talked to showrunner John Wells about possible things we could do with the character in the future, and we go to a place both creatively and financially where I felt comfortable coming back."

Another major upside for hardcore Shameless fans is that Noel Fisher is returning to the series full-time as Mickey Milkovich! After making a surprise cameo in the post-credits scene of the mid-season finale last year, it was revealed he came back to Chicago to serve time with Ian Gallagher. More intriguing still, however, is the fact that Fisher's return was greeted by Cameron Monaghan, who plays Ian but seemingly left the series for several years after Ian got sent to prison halfway through season 9 (hence running into Mickey in prison).

We also now know that Kate Miner (via THR) is going to have a much bigger role in Season 10. Kate Miner plays Tami, Lip's girlfriend who agreed to keep the baby that Lip is the father of. So needless to stay, it would make sense if she was around for a longtime to come in Lip's life, although what that kind of relationship will be remains to be seen.

Shameless Season 10 Images

We got our first images of produciton on Shameless Season 10 when actress Emma Kenney (Debbie on the show) shared them on social media. Fans will likely be pleased to see Ian and Noel Fisher as Mickey back in the Gallagher fold.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Shameless Season 10 Release Date, Cast, News, and More
NewsChris Longo
Dec 29, 2019

Lost In Space Season 3: What's Next for the Sci-Fi Netflix Series?

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The executive producers of Lost in Space tell us where a potential season 3 may take the Robinson family.

Lost in Space Season 3 has yet to be officially confirmed by Netflix, but the executive producers may have learned something from spending so much time with the always prepared Maureen Robinson. The creative minds behind the show already have a roadmap for the third season planned out. 

*Caution: Season 2 spoilers ahead*

“A big thing happened at the end of season 2: the kids and parents are split apart,” showrunner Zack Estrin tells Den of Geek. “We’re going to pick up with two separate stories in season 3.”

The cliffhanger ending of Lost in Space season 2 leaves several storylines up in the air. So far, the Robinsons haven’t met a problem they couldn’t solve together. Now, apart, a potential third season may be their most daunting challenge yet.

“How do the kids and the parents find their way back together?” Estrin says. “What’s it like for the kids without the guide of their parents? It’s like permanent summer camp except for the fact that the ants and insects are just big things that eat you.”

The roots of the storyline for a potential third season go all the way back to when the producers were plotting season 1 of the Netflix re-imagining. The creative team was watching old episodes of Lost in Space at producer Kevin Burns’ office when the season 1 episode “Hello Stranger” caught their attention. In that episode, the Robinson family encounter a famous astronaut named Jimmy Hapgood (played by Warren Oates) who disappeared on a mission to Saturn. John and Maureen Robinson wrestle with the idea that Hapgood could take their kids back to Earth, and whether separating the family is better for the kids or not.

read more: Why The Third Time Was A Charm For Lost in Space

“It was so painful to watch parents say ‘Should we separate from our family’?” says Netflix series co-creator Burk Sharpless.

Executive producer and co-creator Matt Sazama says the writers were struck by the emotional beat. “We said we had to do this beat on the show,” Sazama says. “It’s a direct inspiration from the old black and white first season of Lost in Space.”

Sharpless adds: “It’s a reference to contemporary times with refugees and children who are often doing long journeys across borders and have to survive on their own and say goodbye to their parents. It’s a sci-fi show, so it’s not the same, but we felt it was an emotion that is worthy of being on our show.” 

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Will, Smith, Judy, Penny, and Don in Lost in Space 2
FeatureChris Longo
Dec 30, 2019

Messiah Review (Spoiler-Free)

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Netflix’s Messiah is too long and too crowded for its own good. Yet, it’s also surprisingly compelling and bingeable.

This Messiah review contains no spoilers.

The past couple of years in pop culture have been filled to the brim with scammers and false idols, with everything from fake social media influencers and CEOs, to Russian disinformation campaigns, GoFundMe rip-offs, and whatever you want to call a whole lot of members of the current presidential administration.

So, in way, it feels like we’ve maybe always been headed toward a show like Netflix’s Messiah, which asks an age-old question in a very modern way, mixing religious themes and questions with modern elements like social media, deep fake videos and conspiracy theories.

After all, many of us, whether we believe or not, have probably wondered what it might be like if Jesus Christ returned to the world today. Messiah takes that to the next level, following the story of a mysterious man who might be something more, but told through everyone’s iPhone lenses and Instagram feeds. Is humanity live streaming the end times? Or falling for the greatest internet hoax ever made.

The series begins when a mysterious man begins to gain international attention for performing what appear to be miracles. Things like defeating ISIL by summoning a sandstorm, and leading his initial group of followers to freedom across a cruel desert. As his follower count grows, this man – whom some are already calling “Al-Masih” or “messiah” – attracts the interest of many, including regular folks, leaders of world governments and the CIA.

Messiahtells the story of Al-Masih through multiple perspectives, and the possible holy man himself is not one of them. This of course, makes tons of sense, as the minute the show let us into Al-Masih’s head it would have to pick a side regarding who, precisely he is. And it deeply doesn’t want to do that, since it’s having way too much fun making its viewers believe and doubt and believe again in turns. 

And that’s actually a smart decision. The show is much more compelling for the fact that it doesn’t tell you what to believe one way or another, and generally lets viewers make up their own minds about whether the mysterious cult-like leader is miraculous or a myth. There is certainly evidence enough to make an argument either way, depending on how you interpret the story.  Are Al-Masih’s supposed miracles real? Are they elaborate illusions? Is this man’s past the reason for his current behavior, or merely a footnote on the way to a different future? And does it matter whether he is or isn’t who he says he is, if his presence is changing people’s lives for good.

read more: You Season 2 Review

Messiahframes its story through the POVs of several secondary characters: A CIA agent determined to prove Al-Masih is a terrorist out to disrupt the global political order, a Palestinian refugee who is one of his earliest followers, a lost preacher who finds renewed purpose in his presence, and a sullen teenager who claims he saved her from a tornado, among others. These characters are all flawed, broken people in a variety of ways, who are each looking to fill some gaping lack in their own lives. It makes sense that they’d be drawn to a man like Al-Masih, for both good and ill.

To its credit, Messiah really isn’t about whether its lead character is the Second Coming of Jesus, a messenger from God, or a mental patient struggling with a god complex. Sure, that’s the question at the show’s center, and what’s ostensibly driving its narrative. But the real story is about the way that regular people react to the possibility of the divine in their lives. To the idea of a love that embraces and forgives them no matter they’ve done, to the reminder that one’s life need not forever be defined by the worst mistakes they’ve made. To the possibility that a different kind of life – one with meaning, where miracles might be real, is possible.

For some, that means uprooting their lives and caravanning around the United States after a virtual stranger with no ostensible plan. For others, that means a rejection of almost everything they’ve believed in to this point. Anna, a pastor’s wife, finds no peace in the potential arrival of the end times she’s theoretically spent her life preparing for. Her daughter, Rebecca, finds a reason to stay in the small town she always wanted to leave. Even the President of the United States ultimately questions what he’s been put on Earth to do.

However,Messiah’s not exactly a perfect messenger for its own themes, to put it mildly. The show is at least three episodes too long, spending untold amounts of time in its initial installments trying to simply explain who everyone is. It has several secondary characters too many, and there are a couple of subplots that feel like they exist just to fill out the series’ 10-episode order.

The Palestinian refugee story basically feels superfluous to needs as soon as Al-Masih reaches America, and the addition of a suicide bombing twist doesn’t help much. CNN journalist Miriam Keneally has almost zero depth as a character, and kind of only exists to be used by other figures on the canvas (the one interesting moment where you think she’s about to use a drunk source to break a big story goes nowhere).

And though Michelle Monaghan tries her best, her Eva is often let down by clunky writing, as though having the character insist repeatedly that she only sees the world in black and white, is an acceptable substitute for showing us why she may or may not actually feel that way - particularly by the season’s end.

But it’s awfully easy to believe in Messiah.

Particularly once you get past the slog that is the series’ first four episodes. The questions and scenarios it poses are thoughtful, compelling ones, and Mehdi Dehbi is a magnetic performer in what could, in lesser hands, be a joke of a leading role. The actor walks a fine line between chosen one and charlatan, giving you plenty of moments throughout the series that will have you wobbling about whether you think he’s a monster or a savior.

Messiah isn’t the show we probably all thought it was going to be. And that’s a good thing, in the end. If there’s ever been a time where we all need to feel, just for a moment, that we’re part of something bigger than ourselves, or get a reminder that we’re all connected, in spite of the things that divide us, it’s now. The messenger that delivers it may be kind of messy in places, but it’s worthwhile, all the same.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

3.5/5
ReviewLacy Baugher
Dec 30, 2019
Messiah Netflix Review

Comic Musician Neil Innes Dies at 75

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Neil Innes played with the Rutles, wrote for Monty Python and performed in the Beatles' Magical Mystery Tour.

"I have suffered for my music," Neil Innes admitted on the British comedy series Rutland Weekend Television. "Now it's your turn." The renowned comedian and musician, who played the John Lennon role in The Beatles spoof band The Rutles and collaborated with the Monty Python Flying Circus, died unexpectedly on Sunday night at age 75, according to his official website. A spokesman for the Innes family said the artist had not been ill.

“It is with deep sorrow and great sadness that we have to announce the death of Neil James Innes on December 29, 2019," his family wrote in a statement. “We have lost a beautiful, kind, gentle soul whose music and songs touched the heart of everyone and whose intellect and search for truth inspired us all. He died of natural causes quickly without warning and, I think, without pain. His wife Yvonne and their three sons, Miles, Luke and Barney and three grandchildren Max, Issy and Zac give thanks for his life, for his music and for the joy he gave us all.”

Innes' group, the Bonzo Dog Band, were handpicked by the Beatles to perform the song, “Death Cab for Cutie,” in the 1967 film Magical Mystery Tour. Innes was born in Danbury, Essex, England, and raised in West Germany, where his father, a warrant officer in the British Army, was stationed. He took piano lessons from age 7 to 14 and taught himself to play guitar. 

Innes joined the jazz-inflected anarchic musical outfit the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band in the early 1960s while studying at Goldsmiths College School of Art in London. The group's 1968 "I'm the Urban Spaceman," reached number 5 in the U.K. charts that year. After the band broke up, in 1970, the members merged with comedy, poetry and music trio The Scaffold to form the band GRIMMS.

Innes became involved with the comedy troupe Monty Python's Flying Circus in the 1970s, writing music for their albums Monty Python’s Previous Record and The Monty Python Matching Tie and Handkerchief. He also wrote and performed sketches for the group's final TV series after the temporary departure of John Cleese. He and Hitchhiker's Guide to the Galaxy author Douglas Adams are the only two non-Monty Python members to be credited as writers on the series.

Innes composed the musical pieces "Knights of the Round Table” and “Brave Sir Robin” for the 1975 film Monty Python and the Holy Grail. He appeared in the Terry Gilliam’s 1977 fantasy comedy feature Jabberwocky playing the Second Herald. He collaborated with Eric Idle on the BBC2 television sketch show Rutland Weekend Television, which ran two seasons in 1975 and 1976.

The sketch show spawned the Beatles spoof band The Rutles, which were the focus of the 1978 mockumentary television film All You Need Is Cash. Innes played the character Ron Nasty, who was based on John Lennon. George Harrison appeared in the film and was involved in production from its very beginnings. In 2002, Idle recreated the magic with The Rutles 2: Can't Buy Me Lunch.

Innes is credited as a co-writer on the Oasis song "Whatever," which quotes lines and melodies of Innes’ 1973 song "How Sweet To Be An Idiot."

Innes formed The Idiot Bastard Band in late 2010. The  comedy musical collective included Adrian Edmondson, Phill Jupitus, Simon Brint and Rowland Rivron, which performed a wide range of comedy songs with deliberately little rehearsal.

Innes, along with the remaining Monty Python members, also performed in the 2002 Concert for George.

Culture Editor Tony Sokol cut his teeth on the wire services and also wrote and produced New York City's Vampyr Theatre and the rock opera AssassiNation: We Killed JFK. Read more of his work here or find him on Twitter @tsokol.

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost in Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Neil Innes
NewsTony Sokol
Dec 30, 2019

Best TV Comedy Shows of 2019

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From Fleabag to Pen15 and everything in between, we count down the best TV comedies of 2019.

Comedy television did a lot of growing up in the 2010s. As we kiss goodbye the decade, 2019 was another prime example that the genre continues to take bold creative risks, visually innovate, and push back on the inane idea that “edgy” material has been outlawed in contemporary comedy. 

This year we saw the fine line between comedy and drama shrink to mind-blowingly awesome results (you can classify 3 of our top 4 picks as “dramedy”). Animated comedies that take longer to produce than feature films (looking at you, Roiland and Harmon) redefined any preconceived notions about that subgenre. It was exciting to see refreshing new voices tell stories that connected with audiences on a deeply personal level. And a sketch comedy show finally made it back on our best of list. What a time to be alive.

Let’s cut to the chase… it’s time to reveal the outcome of our annual vote for the best TV comedies of the year! To capture the breadth of the best TV comedy in 2019, we polled 12 Den of Geek staff writers and enlisted our recurring guest contributor Brian Volk-Weiss, Comedy Dynamics CEO and creator of the The Toys That Made Us, to submit a special ballot. Below, you’ll find our honorable mentions, the shows that received votes but just missed the cut for the top 20.

Honorable Mentions

Big Mouth | Bob’s Burgers | End of the F***ing World | Silicon Valley | South Park |The Astronomy Club | The Righteous Gemstones | This Way Up | The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel | Tuca & Bertie

The 20 Best TV Comedies of 2019 

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Pen15

20) Pen15

When Hulu’s PEN15 dropped early in 2019, it came during a wave of popular coming-of-age stories. Sex Education, Eighth Grade, and Big Mouth had all created waves with poignant, sometimes raunchy content about navigating adolescence, but none of these properties went to the depths that co-creators and co-stars Maya Erskine and Anna Konkle did to recreate every cringe-inducing experience of their middle school years. Despite being 31-year-old actresses, the pair play 13-year-olds starting seventh grade among actual 13-year-old co-stars and they channel their younger selves so thoroughly you sometimes forget about the gimmick altogether. 

read more: Pen15 Review (spoiler-free)

Set in the year 2000, PEN15 is also quite a nostalgia trip for viewers of a certain age, as we watch Maya and Anna use their dial-up internet to instant message boys, create Spice Girls-soundtracked dance routines, and devise plans to skip out of a showing of Chicken Run to see Coyote Ugly. However, those broad “remember when?” gags ultimately take a backseat to drilling into the rites of passage that suburban American kids experience going from pre-teens to teens. Careening through one mortifying moment to the next, Maya and Anna try on every insecurity imaginable and bear the brunt of the cruelness of school children as an unpopular duo, while taking their own opportunities to tear other kids down every chance they get. Growing up is hell, and PEN15 reminds us of each of its nine layers. Just like a 13-year-old’s mood swings, this show will make you laugh, break your heart, and have you ruminating on your own awkward years all through the span of a single episode.

- Nick Harley

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - The Good Place

19) The Good Place

NBC’s celestial sitcom The Good Place always has more items on its agenda than merely making its viewers laugh. The show raises some of life’s biggest questions, including but not limited to, what happens after we die? What does it mean to be a good person? And how can we make Ted Danson our dad? Those are all some some heady concepts, indeed, but they never feel like a drag because at the end of the day this remains simply one of the funniest entities on television.

read more: The Good Place and the Problem with Mindy St. Claire

The Good Place’s 2019 output (which includes the back portion of season 3 and the front half of the fourth and final season) is another testament to the level of talent that showrunner Michael Schur has assembled onscreen, behind it, and in the writers room. The end of season 3 finds Michael, Janet, Eleanor, and the rest of Team Cockroach uncovering the reason why no one has actually made it to The Good Place in centuries. The morality of day-to-day life has just gotten too darn complicated. What follows in season 4 is an experiment that sets out to prove that this damned species of ours can really get better if given the chance. But ultimately the only evidence needed for the usefulness of humanity is The Good Place itself.

- Alec Bojalad

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Schitt’s Creek

18) Schitt’s Creek 

Ew, David!

Just as Schitt’s Creek, the CBC/Pop! series about the once-wealthy Rose family who was forced to move to the unfortunately named titular small town they purchased as a goof, was reaching the height of its popularity with the airing of its fifth season, series co-creator and star Daniel Levy decided to pull the plug--its upcoming sixth season will be the last. It was a daring move, one designed so that the show could go out on top a la other classic comedies like Fawlty Towers. But then again, nothing about Schitt’s Creek has been traditional.

read more: Schitt's Creek Season 5 Review

On paper, the series’ characters, which include sarcastic David (Daniel Levy), his vapid sister Alexis (Annie Murphy), their out-of-touch faded actress mother Moira (Catherine O’Hara), and well-meaning father Johnny (Eugene Levy) seem little more like archetypes. Yet through the show’s performances and slice-of-life storylines, we have watched each of these individuals become fully realized, embracing (for the most part) the town and its Simpsons-esque menagerie of huge personalities.

The fifth season gave us supporting characters like David’s fiancé Patrick (Noah Reid) and motel co-owner Stevie (the scene-stealing Emily Hampshire) their time to shine, proving that the series has the most gifted comedy cast on television today. Ultimately though, Schitt’s Creek is a welcoming place for all. The show’s matter-of-fact treatment of LGBTQ+ issues raises the bar for network television. While the Rose family may sometimes be ambivalent about where they find themselves, viewers have come to learn that every second spent in Schitt’s Creek is worth celebrating. And in these difficult times, there is so much value in visiting there.

- Chris Cummins

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Shrill

17) Shrill

The media landscape, though I wouldn’t shy away from extending that to society as a whole, needed Aidy Bryant’s Annie Easton—TV in 2019 wouldn’t have been complete without her. Hulu’s Shrill kicks off with Annie staring in the mirror, pulling and tugging at her clothes before settling down on a marketing ploy “Eat this and be thin” prepackaged diet meal. If you were thinking that the point would then be to watch this woman try to get thin as she gazes onto the toned shiny torsos of Instagram “models” just to feel a little worse about herself, you’d be completely wrong. While it might take a moment for Annie to settle into being our confident unapologetically body positive lead, her journey to it makes for just the type of television excellence we so desperately needed.

read more: Shrill and the Accurate Depiction of Online Trolls

Bryant as well as her co-stars, specifically Lolly Adefope who I immediately became obsessed with in her role as Annie’s roommate Fran, come together to craft a narrative that is emotional and thought provoking while also being downright hilarious. The first season of this breakout hit (an accolade I will personally defend) went places I didn’t see coming, like a take on the morning after pill right in the first episode, while not shying away from tropes I did see coming: like that opening scene. I can’t wait to see what the next season has in store.

- Daniella Bondar

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia

16) It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia

It’s not easy for any series to still feel fresh after 14 seasons, but the latest season of It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia was a glorious return to form after an underwhelming (largely Dennis-less) season 13. There's a powerful redemptive energy that fuels this season. The Gang leaves their comfort zones, but also return to their greatest hits in bold new ways. Episodes like "The Gang Chokes" and "Dee Day" are some of the most satisfying episodes in years and these characters continue to subtly evolve in hilarious ways (Mac's gradual shift into becoming Dennis is perfect growth/regression). The show’s cast has never been better, but this year Danny DeVito seriously steals the show (his “feast of blue” scene is a masterclass in absurdity).

read more: Why Always Sunny Gets Better With Age

Always Sunny Season 14 literally covers all of its bases, gleefully bouncing from parodies of B-action franchises to inspired film noir pastiches, to a tribute to Samuel Beckett's Waiting for Godot that’s set within a laser tag center (something Beckett never had the courage to do). Few shows can hit such disparate extremes while still being gut-bustingly hilarious and feature some of the most deranged characters to ever grace television. And don’t forget, blue has the most anti-oxygens.

- Daniel Kurland

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Derry Girls

15) Derry Girls

A comedy about The Troubles might sound like an impossible needle to thread, but for Lisa McGee's Northern Irish half-hour comedy Derry Girls, it feels like the most natural thing in the world. Set in the pre-Good Friday Accord 1990s, the show focuses on a group of teenage Catholic girls, and one British boy (Dylan Llewellyn), a cousin who joined their ranks in season 1 because he'd catch too much of a beating in a boys' school.

Writer/showrunner Lisa McGee elevates low-stakes embarrassment to a high art, from ditsy Aunt Sarah (Kathy Kiera Clarke) wearing a massive white dress to someone else's wedding to lovable bad girl Michelle (Jamie-Lee O'Donnell) serving pot scones at a wake. Meanwhile the actual high stakes politics of the era, from bomb scares and efforts at friendship across the sectarian divide to a visit from President Clinton, are relegated to setting up jokes. And thus the teen shenanigans are made all the more hilarious for how self-serious the teens can be.

If Derry Girls has a thesis, it might be that teenagers can be hilariously moronic, no matter how massively intense the politics are that they live through. The group regularly bedevils Sister Michael (Siobhan McSweeney), the dryly cutting school headmistress who quickly went from antagonist to a fan-favorite character. Nothing in their lives is too important for Erin Quinn (Soairse-Monica Jackson) to make it about herself, including Clare's (Nicola Coughlan) coming out at the end of last season. Louisa Harland's space cadet cousin Orla is a highlight, as was the return of a priest the group accidentally drove from the priesthood (Peter Campion, who starred in Lisa McGee's previous show, London Irish). Come for the inexplicable hilarity of using the peace process to try to hook up with cute boys and the elbow-throwing brutality of the "Rock the Boat" wedding dance, stay for a show with more heart than just about anything else on television.

- Delia Harrington

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - BoJack Horseman

14) BoJack Horseman

When BoJack Horseman first premiered in 2014, it seemed easily skippable. This animated series about a depressed ex-actor horse came from little-known creator Ralph Bob-Waksberg and got off to a slow start. Not only that but Netflix was still finding its voice in an entertainment landscape where the concept of a “streaming service” was relatively new. Now here we are, six years later, struggling to say goodbye to one of the most important series of the decade.

BoJack Horseman’s sixth and final season was split into two halves, with the first premiering in October 2019 and the second due to arrive in January 2020. That release strategy means that season 6 part 1 is lacking the incredible (and usually devastating) season finale that we’ve come to expect. Still the first eight episodes of this final season find the show very much at the top of its game.

read more: BoJack Season 5 Proves The Show Can Last Forever

The series catches up with BoJack in rehab where he’s making the healing process just as difficult as he’s made everything else. Meanwhile Dianne, Todd, Mr. Peanutbutter, Princess Carolyn, and the other inhabitants of Hollywoo grow up and evolve as best they can through new relationships, children, and a plethora of wacky business opportunities.

The end is nigh for BoJack Horseman, but these hilarious and touching next-to-final episodes prove that there may be a future yet for BoJack himself.

- Alec Bojalad

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Broad City

13) Broad City

Arguably 2019’s biggest TV loss was Broad City, Comedy Central’s hit about two twentysomethings (played by show creators Ilana Glazer and Abbi Jacobson) navigating their way through life against the surreal backdrop of New York City. Although deeply smart and hilarious--the episode where Abbi is hopped up on pain medicine following having her wisdom teeth pulled and proceeds to wreak havoc in a Whole Foods deserves to be on every Best of the 2010s list--the groundbreaking series also tackled topics ranging from the spectrum of sexuality to cultural appropriation in an organic way that felt in touch with how these characters experienced the world.

further reading: The Best TV Comedies on Hulu

As the series progressed, the characters of Abbi and Ilana matured. The fifth and final season was focused on the biggest crisis ever to face the women: Abbi’s leaving New York City for an artist’s residency in Colorado. Ilana’s infatuation and love for Abbi was one of the show’s strongest ongoing jokes, but the last season let this plotline truly breathe.

Ilana views Abbi as much more than a friend; she's a soulmate. The episode “Sleep No More” has Abbi telling Ilana about her moving plans during a trip to a popular immersive theater experience, resulting in an installment that is classic Broad City and a rumination on the power of losing a friend to long distance. Yet as the credits on the final episode rolled, we knew that Abbi and Ilana’s relationship was a strong as ever… and that we had witnessed a series whose influence will be felt for decades to come.

- Chris Cummins

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Rick and Morty

12) Rick and Morty

After quite a long hiatus, the first half of Dan Harmon and Justin Roiland’s brilliant animated sci-fi sitcom resurfaced to (from what I’ve observed) somewhat contentious fan reception. It’s true that a few of these first five episodes have gotten a little lost up inside their own plot holes, Morty. However, there’s been enough funny episodes to balance it out (a parody of the Terminator series featuring snakes and an episode entirely about pooping are notable standouts).

read more: Keep up with all of our Rick and Morty news and reviews right here

Most importantly, a Dan Harmon-run writer room cranks out zany sitcom plots like no other. There simply isn’t another comedy airing right now that week-to-week so packs its individual episodes with ever-escalating, unpredictable storylines and wall-to-wall gags. Even when Rick and Morty’s aim is a little off, you can’t help but appreciate that this is a series that never does half-measures.

- Joe Matar

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - The Other Two

11) The Other Two

Sometimes life imitates art in a way that’s too crazy to comprehend, and at other times art imitates life so brilliantly that you just want to retreat into that art and never leave. The Other Two’s premise is simple enough: two fame-hungry siblings experience a major reckoning when their 13-year-old brother gains staggering success and turns into a Justin Bieber-like pop star overnight. Desperate to latch onto their brother’s fame, Cary and Brooke Dubcek are relegated to the unglamorous shadows of their little brother’s stardom and the humble family’s life starts to transform.

read more: The Other Two Spoiler-Free Review

The Other Two is one of the most brilliant and insightful satires of where the entertainment industry is at and just how ridiculous celebrity culture has become. Deep dives into areas like the extreme regiments of performers, manufactured romances, Instagram fame, and how the whole industry is inherently dishonest are elegantly handled.

Series creators, Chris Kelly and Sarah Schneider (formerly of SNL fame), find the perfectly nihilistic tone to bring this world to life, but are still able to tap into some very real emotion and they always make sure there's a heart to their story. As strong as Ken Marino and Molly Shannon are in this show, Drew Tarver and Heléne Yorke are the best new comedic duo of the year. If The Other Two doesn’t reduce you to uncontrollable fits of laughter, then you’ll at least have “Stink” or “My Brother’s Gay” stuck in your head until the end of 2020.

- Daniel Kurland

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Documentary Now!

10) Documentary Now!

Anthology television continued to thrive in 2019, though comedy is still one area the trend has yet to really permeate. Documentary Now! nicely fills that void—giving us a fresh story, actors, and writing talent in each episode—while also tapping into a love for the art of documentary filmmaking. Credit to Alex Buono and Rhys Thomas, who have co-directed or directed every episode of the series thus far, for tirelessly committing to the format by replicating the varied cinematic style of each documentary they’re spoofing. Like any anthology, the overall quality of each installment may waver depending on the material, but Doc Now feels safeguarded by its sheer ambition.

further reading: Documentary Now Season 3 Review

Bill Hader is noticeably absent from season 3 due to his work on Barry. But any slack left from Hader was picked up by the series’ highest profile guest stars yet, including Owen Wilson and Michael Keaton in “Batsh*t Valley, Parts 1 & 2,” and Cate Blancett in “Waiting For The Artist.” Otherwise, it was business as usual for Doc Now. Season 3 presented some of the series’ best work. We could have watched a full season of Wilson as a batshit cult leader. Zack Kanin and Tim Robinson, co-creators of another series you’ll see very high on this list, penned the excellent bowling episode titled “Any Given Saturday Afternoon.” And John Mulaney and Seth Meyers wrote what arguably is Doc Now’s finest half hour with the musical-focused “Original Cast Album: Co-Op.”

- Chris Longo

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - GLOW

9) GLOW

One of the appeals of GLOW is that, like life, everything changes. And Season 3 is no exception. Thrusting audiences into the messiness of transience, and in a sitcom that actively asks its characters and viewers to reject a “safe” status quo, season 3 proves GLOW is one of the high points of “peak TV” as, unlike most of its contemporaries, it gets better every season. The women of ladies wrestling are thrust into a new environment in Las Vegas where the dynamics of their show-within-a-show have been locked into place like it’s a Broadway play, but their lives are continuously in flux. Beginning with the bold move of finding dark gallows humor in a national tragedy—with Alison Brie’s Ruth Wilder unintentionally mocking the Space Shuttle Challenger crew as they explode on live TV—the series constantly subverts expectations and finds new dimensions for its core cast of misfits.

read more: GLOW's Evolution in Queer Storytelling

At its heart, however, is the need for women to find themselves, even in a landscape as hostile as Las Vegas entertainment. For Sheila (Gayle Rankin) that might mean befriending and coming to understand a gender fluid performer who does not wish to comfortably fit under any specific label, just as Sheila learns not to be just “a wolf,” and for Debbie (Betty Gilpin) it means finding autonomy and control of GLOW away from any male hands, even Sam’s (Marc Maron). For Ruth though, it can mean simply following her own muse and different drum that will take her away from Vegas, away from Betty, and away from GLOW… it even appears poised to ruin the reliable familiarity you have with these characters going forward. The show, and its audience, are better for it.  

– David Crow

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Ramy

8) Ramy

We’ve had plenty of comedy series titled after their stand-up comedian creator and star, but none with such a fresh perspective as Ramy in a long time. Ramy Youssef stars as a slightly fictionalized version of himself, a young first generation Egyptian-American who finds himself caught between the pulls of a typical millennial lifestyle and his Muslim beliefs. Ramy feels guilty about sleeping with white women while trying to forge connections with Muslim woman within his community, ponders the ethics of talking to drunk girls while abstaining from alcohol for religious purposes, and freaks over the moral implications of eating edible marijuana.

On some level, the series looks to normalize a group of Americans that are unfortunately still misunderstood. Struggling with the concept of what it means to be a good person in an increasingly morally gray world, Ramy’s plight is something anybody from any religious background, or lack thereof, can relate to.

read more: Ramy Interview - Why Faith and Family Are The Heart of the Show

This series does much more than educate the ignorant and mines laughs out of sensitive topics that many comedy series would never even touch. Perhaps inspired by the way that executive producer and co-creator Jerrod Carmichael similarly tackled weighty subjects on his unfairly short-lived NBC sitcom The Carmichael Show, Ramy explores what it was like to be a Muslim American in the immediate aftermath of 9/11, the fetishization of otherness, and the dating options of people with disabilities. Most importantly, the show interrogates people who appear to be open-minded until they reveal themselves not to be, Ramy included. With a focused, singular voice steering the series, that’s smart enough to highlight as many universal truths as foreign concepts, Ramy is yet another shining example of why Hollywood needs to keep propping up new, distinct voices.

- Nick Harley

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - VEEP

7) VEEP

With a political reality that seems beyond satire, it’s impressive that Veep still continued to carve out a unique space for itself. Still, it felt like the right decision to bow out with this, its seventh and final season. In it, the series brought to conclusion its evolution from dark, but goofy satire to pitch-black, vicious satire with some actual major dramatic heft behind it.

read more: VEEP Finale Review

The season feels like its telegraphing Jonah Ryan’s gradual transformation into a Trumpian figure who wins the presidency, but that’s a misdirect. Veep is too smart a show for such basic one-to-one parallels, instead going for a much darker, far more unpredictable route, solidifying Julia Louis-Dreyfus’ Selina Meyer as one of TV’s greatest comedic villains.

- Joe Matar

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Catastrophe

6) Catastrophe

Wisely going out on a creative high note, Sharon Horgan and Rob Delaney’s brilliant dramedy, Catastrophe, aired its fourth and final series this year. It’s a stunning feat that, in these final six episodes, Horgan and Delaney introduced and resolved new, self-contained conflicts, all the while also building upon the many ongoing dramas of their ensemble cast, and culminating in a moving, satisfying climax to the overall series.

The show always played its darker, more dramatic moments straight, with the final season boldly confronting alcoholism, loneliness, and death (the late Carrie Fisher played Rob’s mother and the series did not shy away from addressing the loss). Considering how dark it got at times, it’s a wonder that Catastrophe still managed to be consistently hilarious, but, somehow, it did!

- Joe Matar

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - What We Do in the Shadows

5) What We Do in the Shadows

What We Do in the Shadows was 2019’s comedy version of shooting fish in a barrel. Every aspect of this FX vampire mockumentary seemed like it couldn’t possibly fail. The show borrowed an already ingenious concept from Taika Waititi and Jemaine Clement’s 2014 movie of the same name, brought it to serialized format, and then populated it with a talented cast. Still even with all that in place, who could have imagined that What We Do in the Shadows would be this funny?

read more: What We Do in the Shadows Cast Talks About the Vampire Life

Kayvan Novak, Matt Berry, and Natasia Demetriou all shine as inept vampires doing their best in modern day Staten Island. Bringing the show to another level are Mark Proksch as mild-mannered energy vampire Collin Robinson and Harvey Guillén as frustrated vampire familiar Guillermo. Shadows also breathed life into the seemingly dormant mockumentary genre by continually putting its unnamed film crew in mortal danger. At least the footage they’re getting is killer, including the accidental death of a very drunk vampire baron, a poorly planned orgy, and of course: a trial featuring some of pop culture’s most notable vampires.

What We Do in the Shadows proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that Waititi and Clement’s concept has real legs and we can’t wait for more.

- Alec Bojalad

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Barry

4) Barry

Barry knocked us out with its stellar first season and continued to soar in year two. We’ve seen countless iterations of the criminal trying to go straight story, but few that have dived into the twisted morality that comes with “starting over.” Flashing back to Barry’s time in the military was a wise choice to shake-up the structure of the story, as was including a stand-alone surrealist flight of fancy, “rony/lilly,” one of 2019’s single greatest episodes of television. All that said, Barry continues to dazzle because of its all-star cast. Henry Winkler is devastating as deflated, heartbroken Gene Cousineau, Anthony Carrigan continues to delight as the hilariously affable Noho Hank, and Sarah Goldberg perhaps stole the whole show as Sally this year, showing the lengths humans go to create personal narratives for themselves that are more palatable than the truth. 

read more: NoHo Hank Interview

That all being said, Bill Hader is a revelation, whether in front of the camera or behind. His direction arguably made “rony/lilly” the treat that it was and he and co-creator Alec Berg have excelled at writing themselves into corners only to find creative, thrilling ways out. Season 2 went to darker, more thought provoking places as the series asked its central characters to be honest with themselves about who they actually are, and Season 3 looks like it will plunge to even darker depths.

- Nick Harley

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - I Think You Should Leave

3) I Think You Should Leave 

The first hit sketch series of the streaming age, I Think You Should Leave is the show that launched a thousand memes. Created by former SNL writer and Detroiters star, Tim Robinson, alongside producing partner Zach Kanin, ITYSL is six bite-sized, perfectly surreal episodes of sketch comedy that half of our staff can’t stop quoting if their lives depended on it.

read more: Tim Robinson on his Breakout Sketch Show

Focused on people prone to making social faux pas that then double, or even triple, down on their mistakes, the show is part cringe comedy, part absurdist bliss. Its offbeat humor isn’t for everyone, and it certainly shares some DNA with other comedy series like Key & Peele and Tim and Eric, but if you find yourself in this show’s *ahem* comedic queue zone, you’ll find yourself thinking that this show may have been made specifically for you. The weirder, more deranged these sketches get, the harder we laugh. We’ve read at least a dozen writers try to rank the show’s best sketches, and every single person has a different opinion that we vehemently disagree with (our official list will launch prior to the already confirmed second season). Before this entry just devolves into a series of quotes from the show, fire up ITYSL and see for yourself what this wonderful, weird show is all about.

- Nick Harley

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Russian Doll

2) Russian Doll

Just when you thought you finally got Harry Nilsson's 1971 banger “Gotta Get Up” out of your head, here’s a reminder that Netflix’s Russian Doll was on a loop in your brain when it took the streaming world by storm in February. Yes, it’s been a long, long year. Nilsson’s earworm of a song is inescapable because it’s playing in the background of a party every time we meet and re-meet the show’s protagonist, Nadia (Natasha Lyonne), who is stuck in a time loop on the night of her 37th birthday. Think Groundhog Day, but Nadia always dies in some unsuspecting way, then wakes up in a bathroom staring into a mirror with “Gotta Get Up” blasting all over again.

To delve any more into plot would be to spoil the birthday fun for the uninitiated, but the mysteries of the show unfold like the Matryoshka doll its named after (We have our own spoiler-filled theories on the ending). While we may have geeked out on the time loop aspect of the show, series co-creators Lyonne, Leslye Headland, and Amy Poehler devised a darkly comedic narrative that touches on elements of magical realism, moral philosophy, and existential dread.

Perfect is an impossible bar to reach. Several shows this year (including the No. 1 title on this list and HBO’s Watchmen) were damn near close to making a flawless season of television. Russian Doll falls into that camp for the riveting journey it takes us on, but perhaps no other actor on this list is singularly more responsible for carrying a show on its back than Lyonne, who never meets a one-liner or moody glance she can’t elevate as she fully commits to Nadia, an impulsive, neurotic, and lovable salt-of-the-earth New Yorker.

- Chris Longo

Best TV Comedies of 2019 - Fleabag

1) Fleabag 

With the second and final season of Fleabag, Phoebe Waller-Bridge somehow managed to outdo what many considered one of the best seasons of television, won a whole slew of awards for what is now commonly known to actually be one of the best pieces of television of any kind, all while securing her reputation as an auteur creator. While the first season was an unvarnished look at how strange and complicated real grief can be, season 2 added faith and healing to the mix. What does it mean to become a better person, and how does everyone else react when someone they rely upon to be a shitshow actually gets their act together?

From the perfect opening episode of the dinner party, it's clear that there's been a reset of some kind. Part of the new generation of half-hour comedies versus sitcoms, Fleabag allows its characters to grow and change, and boy did they ever. Well, everyone except for Godmother, who remains a hilariously awful twat, played to painful perfection by Olivia Colman. Andrew Scott's (Hot) Priest entered the proceedings with a level of humor and sexiness that should, frankly, be illegal for a man of the cloth, even in a television show, lest all our dead Catholic grandmothers' collective turning in their grave actually shift the earth's turning on its axis.

read more: Phoebe Waller-Bridge on Sex, Femininity, and Guinea Pigs

Of course Fleabag is still a comedy, and season 2 didn't let us down in that regard. The two Claires; the cameo from Kristine Scott Thomas; Claire looking like a pencil; the return of the stolen statue; really everything Sian Clifford. After all, the strange, often-hostile but always loving relationship between the two sisters was the greatest love story of the series, even if this season was explicitly a love story with someone else. For all the heady analysis of the show, it's simply damned funny. Great writing layers one joke after another into the same scene the way they often happen in real life, with no laugh track and usually a poor reaction from those present, if any at all. Some of the best performances on any screen--any size, any platform, anywhere--make every line crackle.

Fleabag's asides to the audience remain here, and PWB's microscopic control of every muscle of her face allows her to flick the smallest, most artful of playful looks in the middle of pretending to look sad, concerned, or sexy. But a true artist gives us innovation, and the internet's collective stomach dropped out when the Priest caught Fleabag looking at us. The heartbreaking cleverness of having him be the first person who really sees her enough to know when she's checking out on her life to check in with us is genius. More than a plot twist, it exposed the show's essential format for being a harmful emotional crutch for its star. The final innovation was the best of all--Fleabag's heart may be broken, but she learned something vital with the Priest: she has outgrown the audience and said goodbye. We're not entitled to her anymore.

- Delia Harrington

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost In Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Best TV Comedy Shows of 2019
FeatureChris LongoDelia HarringtonAlec Bojalad Nick HarleyDaniella BondarJoe MatarDaniel Kurland David Crow
Dec 31, 2019

Star Wars Blaster Canon Podcast: The Rise of Skywalker, The Mandalorian

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Our Star Wars podcast hosts talk about their impressions of The Rise of Skywalker and talk about universal enjoyment of The Mandalorian.

The Rise of Skywalker is here, and it’s wild! For the Star Wars Blaster Canon podcast analysis this month, we have mixed opinions on the final installment of the main Star Wars saga with its surprising alliances and whether or not the story truly ends here. Saf and Paul enjoyed the film, while Megan has criticisms and questions to share. We cover the twists and surprises in The Rise of Skywalker, as well as the character development and the script and what the movie might mean for the future of Star Wars.

Before we get into all that, however, we couldn't help but take a quick jaunt into tie-in material with The Mandalorian, which has been a great success over at Disney+. At the time of the podcast recording, the finale  of The Mandalorian's successful first season had not yet aired, so we continue our discussion from last month and dive into episodes 4 through 7. All of the hosts are enjoying the series, but Saf has some suggestions for viewing order.

further reading: Star Wars: The Mandalorian Ending Explained

In Expanded Universe news, Paul has been reading The Rise of Kylo Ren, and Megan takes a look as well; in fact, she may or may not have read the whole issue in the course of recording this podcast. Things have been otherwise a bit quiet in the Star Wars books realm, but Megan has read Force Collector and has a brief review. It’s a fun book, but what are its implications about the First Order? Like The Rise of Skywalker, they’re a bit weird.

Join our Star Wars Blaster Canon podcast every month or so for all of the latest news about everything in the canon, from movies to books to television and more! Subscribe wherever you get your podcasts, or simply listen below!

Subscribe: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | Stitcher | Acast | RSS

Read and download the Den of Geek Lost in Space Special Edition Magazine right here!

Megan Crouse writes about Star Wars and pop culture for StarWars.com, Star Wars Insider, and Den of Geek. Read more of her work here. Find her on Twitter @blogfullofwords.

Finn and Poe in Star Wars: The Rise of Skywalker
FeatureMegan Crouse
Dec 31, 2019

The Best TV Shows of the Decade

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You think picking the best TV shows of the 2010s was easy? Think again.

Throughout the span of this volatile decade, the entity known as television had a bit of an identity crisis. As the era of streaming began, more shows were available than ever before and on an increasingly diverse array of channels and technologies to boot. “TV” became something far beyond just the square box that sat in our living rooms.

But regardless of what you call it, television as a medium still blossomed during the 2010s. “Prestige” networks like FX, AMC, and HBO kept up the good work while new streaming options like Netflix, Amazon Prime, and eventually Disney+ sprouted up all around them. The CW successfully rebranded under the Arrowverse and teen-friendly melodramas like Riverdale. The final effect of all the programming meant that whatever you wanted to find on television during the decade, you were likely able to find. Now at the end of it all, it’s time to reflect upon the decade that was. Gathered here are the best and most important TV shows of the decade.

The Best Drama Shows of the 2010s

American Crime Story

Ryan Murphy developed American Crime Story to be an anthology series for FX that would chronicle some of the most “popular” crimes in recent American history. Season 2’s The Assassination of Gianni Versace was excellent, but it’s the show’s first installment that remains one of the best seasons of television of the decade. The People vs. O.J. Simpson at times seems like a bit Too Much (TM) but this is the rare real life case that can’t be hyperbolized. Murphy’s melodramatic sensibilities are at home here in a story that somehow feels like it not only predicts but comments on the decades of American pop culture life to come. - Alec Bojalad

The Americans, “START”

The Americans

As FX’s Cold War spy drama The Americans was entering its fourth season, an espionage-savvy Russia was emerging once again as a villain on the world’s stage. It’s tempting to say that The Americans became more relevant than ever then, but the truth is that the story of Philip and Elizabeth Jennings a.k.a. Mischa and Nadezhda had always been relevant from its opening moments to its brilliant final episode. Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg’s series was a master class in storytelling, and examined concepts of loyalty whether that loyalty be to your spouse, your country, or both. - AB

Better Call Saul Bob Odenkirk as Jimmy McGill Saul Goodman

Better Call Saul

Better Call Saul is the rare TV spinoff that feels every bit as as complex, virtuosic, and compelling as its parent series. Centering on everyone’s favorite criminal lawyer in the time before (and sometimes after) the Breaking Bad timeline, Better Call Saul could have been a cash grab, a network banking on familiarity and fan service to pull in ratings. Instead, it's a grounded, deeply human story about people and their capacity to change, lifted up more by new elements, like the all but doomed relationship between Jimmy McGill (Bob Odenkirk) and new character Kim Wexler (Rhea Seehorn), than it’s association to Breaking Bad. - Nick Harley

Big Little Lies Season 1 Cast

Big Little Lies 

Adapted from Liane Moriarty's deceptively sharp book packaged as a light beach read, Big Little Lies took advantage of a rare lull in the Peak TV era and premiered after the holidays in 2018, but before spring programming for 2019 got going. Producer Reese Witherspoon, now famous for her book club on Twitter, had the insight and gravitas to get the project going and stacked the cast with amazingly talented women like Nicole Kidman, Shailene Woodley, Laura Dern, Zoe Kravitz, and Season 2 addition Meryl Streep. If all that isn't a recipe for success, then I don't know what is.

read more: The Best TV Episodes of 2019

Director Jean-Marc Vallee helped create dreamy visuals for the filthy rich community and the trauma that plays out there, but it's the powerhouse women and the soundtrack that will really stick with us. Alexander Skarsgard was spot on as an abuser with the veneer of physical and even emotional perfection as world's greatest dad and husband, but only when he thought others were looking. Unfortunately, season 2, which was directed by Andrea Arnold, reportedly saw creative control removed from the show's first woman director and given to Jean-Marc Vallee. The move, which runs counter to the onscreen and behind the scenes ethos of the show, was blamed for some of the second season's unevenness as well as robbing audiences of the chance to see Reese Witherspoon pelt Meryl Streep with an ice cream cone, a scene which itself could've made this list. - Delia Harrington 

Martin Freeman as Everett Ross

Fargo

If Fargo had ended after its first season, it would likely still be remembered as a tasteful, fun homage to the Coen Brothers’ film and entire aesthetic. But as the show continued and, especially in its brilliant, best-of-the-decade second season, creator Noah Hawley tapped into something that was greater than just Coen cosplaying. With a brilliant cast, cocksure writing, and an immersive retro setting that heightened the show’s idiosyncratic Midwestern vibe, Fargo found an unparalleled groove that was deeply human, yet subversive and surreal. Oh, and brutally violent, dontcha know. - NH

The Handmaid's Tale Sequel The Testaments Hulu

The Handmaid’s Tale 

In the same way that Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale shaped the discourse in the twilight of the Cold War and the years that followed, no other book, movie, song, or TV show has had a larger cultural impact on Trump-era American than Hulu's television adaptation. The iconic red cloaks are everywhere, from our newsfeed to our protests to memes about the first family. Even conservatives watch the show, though many lament that they don't understand why we need to "make it about politics" or wonder why noones getting more upset about how other parts of the world treat women, in a wonderful example of completely missing the point.

read more: The Must See Movies of 2019

The Handmaid's Tale is a stunning example of the right message at the right time with the right vision, kick-started by director Reed Morano, who directed the first three episodes of season one, setting the bold visuals for the show, and has since directed the forthcoming adaptation The Power, a book written by Atwood mentee Naomi Alderman.

Elisabeth Moss's performance as Ofglenn, now known as June, cemented her status as one of the top actors of the Prestige TV era. Yvonne Strahovski is a force, compelling audiences to see dimensions in Serena Joy even when we don't want to. Watching Ann Dowd win the Emmy for Aunt Lydia was almost as charming as her performance is maddening. While June's continued inability to get herself over the finish line of leaving Gilead and the trauma porn aspects of the show start to wear, performances from the arresting Alexis Bledel as Emily, Max Minghella's opaque Nick, Amanda Brugel's ever-evolving Rita, Madeline Brewer as the somewhat unstable, childlike Janine, and recent Bradley Whitford as a morally complex commander make Gilead and The Handmaid's Tale worth the return trip. - DH

Best TV Shows Hannibal

Hannibal 

In its gradual adoption of cinematic sensibilities, the TV landscape ended the decade with more “auteurs” then it started, but creator Bryan Fuller was there throughout, bringing his aesthetic and narrative vision and specificity to the gorgeous and gory world of Hannibal, which somehow aired its three macabre seasons on broadcast TV. The story of a cannibalistic serial killer with refined tastes (Mads Mikkelsen) and the FBI special investigator he found the most delicious (Hugh Dancy), Hannibal is a homoerotic horror unlike anything seen on TV before or since—a feast of a show that is almost as hard to watch as it is to turn away from. - Kayti Burt

Hulu TV Shows - In the Flesh

In the Flesh 

While In the Flesh came relatively early in a decade, this British gem was mostly lost in BBC America’s 2013-2014 programming schedule. Those viewers who did find In the Flesh were graced with a meticulously-crafted character drama set in a post-zombie Britain where the development of a medication for zombie-ism has allowed “Partially-Deceased Syndrome” (PDS) sufferers to begun to be integrated back into society.

We follow Kieren Walker (Luke Mitchell), a PDS sufferer who is returning to his hometown: the rural, northern Roarton. Left by the government to fend for itself during the zombie outbreak, Roarton has strong anti-PDS sufferer sentiments, and the volunteer militia to back it up. It is into this pressure cooker of a situation that Kieren and fellow PDS sufferers return.

read more: The Must See Movies of 2020

In the Flesh only ran for two short seasons, but it’s pre-Brexit exploration of the cultural divides between urban and rural populations, its depictions of mental illness, and its centering of queer characters are among the many strengths that set this series apart as something worth remembering and returning to. - KB

Best TV Shows Justified

Justified

One of the best things any TV show can capture is a sense of place. FX’s Justified did so in spades. Despite being filmed in California, Justified is a stunningly rich portrait of Appalachian America run through a crime novel prism. This chatty adaptation of an Elmore Leonard short story stars Timothy Olyphant as U.S. Marshal Raylan Givens and Walton Goggins basically harnessing the power of the sun as villain and occasional antihero Boyd Crowder. Justified is just thrillingly entertaining stuff and forever captures the meaning of what it means to “dig coal together.” - AB

Jodie Comer and Sandra Oh in Killing Eve

Killing Eve 

If you've never said, "Villanelle can step on my neck," did you even watch television in the late twenty-teens?! Our Lady of Television Phoebe Waller-Bridge gave us yet another stunner in the form of BBC America's psycho-sexual crime thriller Killing Eve. Adapted from the Codename: Villanelle books, the series follows MI6 desk flunky/crime enthusiast Eve Polastri (Sandra Oh, finally recognized for her perfect hair and finally given top billing) as she is plucked out of desk drone land by her boss/bad bitch Caroline (Fiona Shaw) for her insights into a female assassin, Villanelle (Jodie Comer).

The show manages to pack plenty of commentary on race, gender, the workplace, sex work, and even kicked off a trend of giant pink red carpet couture maximalism in between sneaky, brainy, sexy story beats with far more laughs than a show this good in other ways should be allowed.

As the women find themselves locked in a game of cat and mouse, it becomes difficult to tell who is hunting whom, and for what purpose. Is sexually fluid Villanelle in love with Eve, merely obsessed until she grows bored and kills her, or is this all some kind of ploy? Is married-to-a-moustache Eve falling for Villanelle, becoming enchanted with the idea of breaking out of her rut, or genuinely starting to tap into her inner sociopath? Who can say, but in the meantime you can catch me ogling both of their wardrobes, mainlining the trance-chic soundtrack, and counting down the days until Killing Eve season 3. - DH

The Leftovers 

The Leftovers was Damon Lindelof’s television followup to Lost and also in a strange way HBO’s very belated followup to The Sopranos. Just like the classic drama that preceded it, The Leftovers was all about coming in at the ending of something: in this case the ending of the world. When 2% of the world’s population is raptured in a mysterious celestial event known as the Sudden Departure, those left behind have to grapple with what it means to live in a world of such impermanence. Boasting a great first season and classic final two seasons, The Leftovers was one of the best series of the decade and perhaps one of the best meditations on grief ever communicated. - AB

Berlin in The Man in the High Castle

The Man in the High Castle 

It wasn’t just the alternate history in which the Axis powers won World War II or even the dimension-hopping sci-fi elements of The Man in the High Castle that made this adaptation great. That credit goes to the magnificent characters enacted by the principal cast including Rufus Sewell’s despicable yet sympathetic John Smith, Alexa Davalos’ soft-spoken but indomitable Juliana Crain, and Cary-Hiroyuki Tagawa’s perfectly serene Trade Minister Tagomi. The series had its ups and downs in its 2015-2019 run, but not only did it lead the way in solidifying Amazon’s position in the streaming service wars; it also nailed the landing with a top-notch ending that surpassed previous seasons. - Michael Ahr

Mr. Robot Season 4 Episode 12 13 Finale

Mr. Robot

A lot of creators describe their TV shows as a “x-hour movie.” It’s a mostly bullshit way to describe a series, but Mr. Robot creator Sam Esmail gets a pass from us if he wants to describe his cyberpunk thriller that way. Esmail expertly blends Hitchcockian paranoia and abnormal framing to create a show that looks like nothing else on TV, and that’s before we mention the show’s content, from its radical Eat the Rich politics to its unflinching exploration of trauma and mental health. Emmy-winning star Rami Malek is at once magnetic and deeply uncomfortable to watch. - NH

Orange Is the New Black Season 7

Orange is the New Black

In hindsight, the success of Netflix seemed inevitable. Early in the decade the nascent streaming service was too rich, too popular, and too singularly dedicated to being a part of the TV conversation for it to not eventually produce a hit. How lucky are we though that Netflix’s first hit turned out to be Orange is the New Black? Jenji Kohan’s seven-season long dramedy used Piper Kerman’s memoir of incarcerated life as a jumping off point to tell sprawling stories about women and the prison industrial complex in America. While Taylor Schilling’s Piper was the focus of the show’s first season,Orange is the New Black soon evolved into something much bigger in which just about every character had her voice heard. For over half the decade, Orange is the New Black was both a searing political drama and a hangout comedy set in one of the last places you’d want to hang out. - AB

Riverdale Season 4 Episode 9 on The CW

Riverdale

Riverdale built its viewership slowly in the first season, mostly among teens and television die-hards who spent a lot of time on Twitter talking about how bonkers it was. From one week to the next, the adaptation of Archie comics seemed determined to both update its gender and sexual identity politics for the modern era (Betty and Veronica have better things to do than fight over Archie; #Choni for life) and be as extra as possible (wax-sealed invitations to a funeral come to mind, among about a million other examples). Equal parts Veronica Mars and Gossip Girl, more Twin Peaks than Vampire DiariesRiverdale opened up a new CW era dominated by the Arrowverse and spooky-sexy adaptations of existing properties like Nancy DrewRoswell, NM, and Chilling Adventures of Sabrina (even if that one lives over on Netflix). Riverdale, thank you for giving us annual musical episodes, the final heartfelt performance of Luke Perry, and teens who take breaks from their blood oaths to the Goblin King to go to the prom. - DH

Benedict Cumberbatch and Martin Freeman in Sherlock

Sherlock 

When Sherlock was good, it was very good, and when it was bad, it was horrid. So why does it deserve a spot on this list? In an age of adaptation, Steven Moffat and Mark Gatiss demonstrated just how relevant, novel, and exciting even the most adapted of properties could still be, making one of the most popular shows of the early decade that would launch its stars into super stardom—or at least into the MCU.

Benedict Cumberbatch is brilliant as manic genius Sherlock Holmes, and Martin Freeman is just as good (if not less showy) as his best friend and chronicler John Watson (not to mention future "Hot Priest" Andrew Scott as Moriarty). The whip smart series loses its way after the first two-ish seasons, spinning out on too much plot and not enough character, but we’ll always have “The Reichenbach Fall,” and the era of extra-long TV episodes this show helped inspire. - KB

Succession on HBO Season 2 Episode 9

Succession 

Sometimes TV shows excell by being the perfect mixture of high and lowbrow, capturing the attention of the entire public by having something to offer everyone. It’s entirely possible to enjoy Succession on a surface level -- you can laugh at the one-liners and brutal put downs and gape at the extravagant lifestyles on display. But there’s also a story about broken people self-sabotaging and back-stabbing in a modern Shakespearean power struggle. Regardless of how you watch, this band of contemptible buffoons has us enthralled. It’s the guiltiest of TV pleasures, like bingeing on ortolan every Sunday night. - NH

True Detective Season 3 Crossover Spiral

True Detective

Every now and then you’ll hear a “time is a flat circle” out in the wild and smile at all the good times we shared with True Detective this decade. True Detective came out of the gate in 2014 providing fodder for compelling watercooler conversation in a way that only good TV can provide. The show’s first season was unambiguously great with writer Nic Pizzolatto concocting a pulpy detective novel narrative with some occult elements for lead actors Matthew McConaughey and Woody Harrelson to sink their teeth into. Rushed into production after the first, the second season was lacking a sense of joy and creativity. But Pizzolatto and the show got back on track with the third installment, which sent Mahershala Ali and Stephen Dorff out to the Ozarks for a decades-spanning tale of pain and regret. - AB

The Best Comedy Shows of the 2010s

Atlanta Season 3 Release Date, Cast, News

Atlanta

You never know what you’re going to get when you turn on an episode of Atlanta. Is this going to a simple half hour following the ascent of Paper Boi’s (Brian Tyree Henry) rap career with Earn (Donald Glover) and Darius (Lakeith Stanfield) along for the ride? Or is it going to be a Southern Gothic mystery? A parody of local TV news? A terrifying horror movie starring corpse-like recluse Teddy Perkins? Above all else, FX’s Atlanta is a vehicle for all of Donald Glover’s best ideas. And as it turns out: Donald Glover has a lot of good ideas. - AB

Bill Hader and Henry Winkler on HBO's Barry

Barry 

Bill Hader’s post-SNL starring vehicle has turned into one of the most exciting dramedies of the decade. Filled with humor, pathos, and tension, Barry quickly establishes its dramatic stakes with an inventive hitman story. With its titular emotionally-stunted contract killer who catches the acting bug, Barry takes the bones of Grosse Pointe Blank and infuses them with the moral quandaries, existential ennui, and downbeat, spirit-sucking compromises of Better Call Saul. Deeply human, funny, and surprising, Barry is as ambitious and sure-handed as any comedy in the last ten years. - NH

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend Season 4

Crazy Ex-Girlfriend

Has any show taken bigger swings than Crazy Ex-Girlfriend? A victim of an off-brand title, this endlessly witty, raunchy, farcical feminist one-hour network musical is the kind of television miracle you where just hold your breath and hope it will keep happening. It comes from the brilliant minds of star/creator Rachel Bloom (of "Fuck Me Ray Bradbury" fame), showrunner Aline BroshMcKenna, and Adam Schlesinger (Fountains of Wayne, the music from That Thing You Do and Music and Lyrics). Meta doesn't even begin to cover a show that playfully pokes fun at sexism, musicals, Jewishness, television itself, and just about everything else they could think of, from girls night to the terrifying nature of childbirth.

read more: The Best Video Games of 2019

A list of things to love about this show: Broadway star Donna Lynn Champlin as best friend/obsessive/mom/lawyer Paula; the song "Gettin' Bi" and the treatment of bisexuality in general; Vella Lovell's sarcastic, low-energy (but eventually high-achieving) neighbor-turned-best-friend Heather; sexy AF lovably dumb leading man Josh Chan (Vincent Rodriquz III) and the fact that the white dude is the other, the delightful and grounded White Josh (David Hull); Santino Fonatana's Greg; Filipino culture; Valencia's glow-up.

There's a ton more, including an impressive catalogue of running jokes and the show's impressive, nuanced and long-term engagement with mental health. Many shows ended in 2019, and mostly folks focus on those that didn't see their endings through like Game of Thrones. But some of the "smaller" shows like Crazy Ex-Girlfriend went out by staying true to their message and their characters, with perfect aplomb, and that should be remembered and celebrated. - DH

Derry Girls

Derry Girls

Nineties nostalgia is in, but it's a good bet no one was in a rush to re-live the Troubles in Northern Ireland. Leave it to the Irish to find the humor in everything - and put it to a stellar soundtrack to boot. Lisa McGee's half-hour comedy Derry Girls follows a group of teenagers at their all-girls Catholic school (plus one boy, genuine Derry Girl himself James - Dylan Llewellyn) as they get up to all kinds of ridiculous shenanigans like accidentally making people think a dog peeing on a statue is a miracle, accidentally burning down the best chip shop in town, accidentally driving a priest out of the priesthood, accidentally causing a bomb scare, accidentally feeding everyone marijuana scones at a wake, and a bunch of other nonsense.

In Derry Girls, politics is the backdrop, the white noise of teen life, while friendship, family, posturing about being cool, trying to make out, and general tomfoolery take center stage - though not necessarily in that order. Every character on the show is an absolute legend, from self-important Erin Quin (Saoirse-Monica Jackson) to visibly long-suffering headmistress Sister Michael (Siobhan McSweeney). It's pretty much impossible not to binge every new season immediately - we just hope they keep 'em coming. - DH

Fleabag Season 1 Recap

Fleabag 

For two glorious, perfect seasons of television, Fleabag (Phoebe Waller-Bridge) talked to us. Yes, us: you, me, them, and everyone else in the world lucky enough to have an Amazon Prime subscription. Fourth wall breaking isn’t necessarily new or novel at this point but, on Fleabag, being let into the trust and confidence of the title character somehow felt like the most important thing in the world. Fleabag is one very simple story spread out over 12 short episodes, but the level of intimacy garnered between storyteller and audience created a television viewing experience like no other. Phoebe Waller-Bridge’s carefully crafted character study is one of the best shows of this decade...or any other. - AB

GLOW Season 3 Release Date, Cast, News

GLOW

Is GLOW even really a comedy? What could have been a one-joke premise about an underdog group of women professional wrestlers who would mostly rather be doing anything else turned into one of the most charming shows of recent years. Its spectacular ensemble cast, anchored by Alison Brie, the endlessly brilliant Betty Gilpin, and Marc Maron in the best moments of his career would be enough for any show, but there might not be a better blueprint for comedic timing and dramatic pacing in all of TV right now. It's a mystery how this show can be so effortlessly hilarious and poignant or how it can turn the corner from life-affirming warmth to anxiety-inducing heartbreak in the space of a scene, but GLOW does it all, often before you realize what has happened. - Mike Cecchini

The Good Place Season 3 Episode 10: The Book of Dougs

The Good Place

The original concept of The Good Place was fantastic enough. A "Skinny Girl" margarita mix-drinking Arizona suburb rat is accidentally sent to heaven and must quickly become a better person before the celestial powers-that-be realize their mistake and send her to The Bad Place where she belongs. But of course Michael Schur’s series ended up being far more than that. For four seasons, The Good Place told a touching and hilarious story about humanity, our flaws, and how we could possibly ever get better. - AB

Jane the Virgin Season 5 News

Jane the Virgin

The CW has changed a lot as a network, but there was a beautiful time when it was home to a number of delightful "outsider" type shows, wonderful creations like iZombieand Crazy Ex-Girlfriend that wouldn't have found a home on any other network, but found a loyal audience and told great stories in their time. Jane the Virgin embodied this as well as some of the network's other traits, like diversity and valuing the stories of women.

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Jane the Virgin told the stories of the three vibrant Villanueva women as they lived and loved in Miami, kicking off with the telenovela-adapted plot of virginal Jane becoming pregnant due to an accidental artificial insemination. Starring actual telenovela heartthrob Jamie Camil and guest starring everyone from living legend/PEGOT winner Rita Moreno and Charo to Gloria Estefan and Juanes, Jane the Virgin managed to do something tricky in that it both comments on something and is the thing itself.

But the show is so much more than zany plots (though it reveled in them, as did its personable narrator). Jane is a story of family and faith, many different love stories, and one of the greatest character developments of all time in the form of Petra (Yael Grobglas.) It gave Abuela a genuine love life and showed people of faith with dimension. It made puns like no tomorrow. It called out human rights violations and microaggressions from season-long arcs to on-screen hashtags courtesy of the narrator. And it did it all with joy, fun, heart, and a signature guitar riff, at a time when we really needed something wonderful to cheer for on our screens. - DH

Key & Peele

Key & Peele

There’s a certain show on Saturday nights that tends to suck all the oxygen out of the room when it comes to sketch comedy on television. But more than any other, this was the decade where Saturday Night Live got all the competition it could handle and then some. Inside Amy Schumer, I Think You Should Leave with Tim Robinson, A Black Lady Sketch Show, and more all elevated the sketch comedy game in the 2010s. But it’s Key & Peele that left the most indelible impact.

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Key & Peele was launched by Mad TV vets Jordan Peele and Keegan-Michael Key. The show came along on Comedy Central in 2012 with little fanfare and few bells and whistles. For five seasons this was, above all else, just damn good sketch comedy. Not only will many of the Key & Peele skits here be with us for years to come, but so will Key and Peele themselves. - AB

New Girl, “Engram Pattersky”

New Girl

Every decade has its quintessential hangout show, and for the 2010s that has to be New Girl. First of all, escalating rent prices and salary stagnation in the 2010s made it so this was the first time on TV that it was believable that four 30-somethings would still be sharing a loft together! Just kidding (barely). Anyway, Jess (Zooey Deschanel), Nick (Jake Johnson), Schmidt (Max Greenfield), and Winston (Lamorne Morris) were the roommates we wanted to watch bond, bicker, and play True American. Kudos to creator Elizabeth Meriwether and company for knowing exactly when to pair characters off, break them up, and eventually bring them back together to create some of the best will they/won’t they stories in recent memory. - NH

Nathan For You

Nathan for You

During a decade of generational comedic surplus on Comedy Central, Nathan Fielder comfortably slipped just below the spotlight with Nathan for You. Playing a heightened version of himself, Fielder set out to help struggling small business owners with elaborate marketing schemes that ranged from unorthodox to downright absurd. Some, like a completely germ-free hot dog stand, failed. Other concepts, like Dumb Starbucks, went viral and brought a new level of fame to Fielder and the show.

With each passing season, Fielder became more methodical and ambitious, ultimately leading him to spend three episodes’ worth of budget on the series’ epic, heartfelt, and perfect swansong, “Finding Frances.” Cultural critic Errol Morris, writing for The New Yorker, went as far as to say the episode was his “new favorite exploration of love.” The show at a surface level was about Fielder fighting for the little guy—he once enlisted a sleeper cell of taxi drivers to take down Uber. In taking the fight to the ground level, the genius of Nathan for You was how it seemed to find humanity—and stop to both appreciate it and laugh with it, not at itin every twist and turn along the way. - Chris Longo

Andy Daly in Review

Review

Based on an Australian show of the same name, Review debuted in the middle of a period of stellar, star-driven hits for Comedy Central. Series creator and star Andy Daly unfortunately took a backseat on a network with Key & Peele, Amy Schumer, and Jon Stewart, and Review never quite received the full attention it deserved as the show failed to find an audience to match the loud critical acclaim.

Daly starred as Forest McNeil, a TV host who set out to review “life experiences” based on user submissions and assign a star rating to them. The fun concept spiraled into utter lunacy because McNeil was steadfast in following through with the show’s mission statement at the cost of his marriage, his physical and mental well-being, and nearly his life. An extreme example of how being a workaholic can affect those around you (although Forest’s actions were heavily impacted by his shady producer Grant), Review gave us so much pleasure in watching the slow and painful demise of a good, but stubborn man. - CL

Nadia with cat Oatmeal in Russian Doll

Russian Doll

The Groundhog Day format of one or more characters living out the same day over and over again became shockingly prevalent in the latter half of the decade with films such as Edge of Tomorrow and Happy Death Day deploying the concept. Maybe we all just felt as though we were reliving the same horrifying day over and over with to begin with. Regardless, the best use of the strategy came on television in Natasha Lyonne, Amy Poehler, and Leslye Headland’s brilliant Russian Doll. Repeatedly killing and resurrecting Lyonne’s Nadia over and over again not only proved to be an excellent source comedy but also led to a touching exploration of humanity and what we all owe to each other. - AB

Schitt's Creek Season 5

Schitt’s Creek

At first glance, Schitt’s Creek may seem like a straightforward sitcom about a wealthy family losing everything and winding up in a small town filled with kooky characters. However, Dan Levy took this already rich situationally concept and gave us one of the kindest shows of the 2010s. Schitt's Creek isn't just a clever comedy starring The Great Catherine O'Hara, it's a story intentionally without homophobia where everyone, even the recovering socialites of the Roze family, has a place. Come for the famous Levy eyebrows, stay for the community theater productions of Cabaret. - KB

Silicon Valley Season 6 Release Date, Cast, Episode Details, News

Silicon Valley

As far as popular, long-running HBO comedies go, Silicon Valley, from creator Mike Judge, never fully received the warm love and recognition it deserved despite a number of Emmy nominations over the years. Let’s right that wrong here.

The show was resilient from the outset after the departure of two fan-favorite characters; losing Peter Gregory after season 1, who was played by Christopher Evan Welch, who passed away far too soon at the age of 48 in 2013, was a major blow; then the uncomfortable divorce with actor TJ Miller and the banishment of Erlich Bachman after season 4 could have crippled a lesser show. Silicon Valley only got better with age. Its remarkable final season was grounded in its core “tethics” and will be a lasting commentary on privacy, the moral and ethical responsibilities of Big Tech, and a transformational period in the valley. - CL

Veep Season 7 Episode 6

Veep

Pound for pound there may not have been a funnier show this decade than HBO’s hilarious, brutal political satire Veep. Julia Louis-Dreyfus stars out as the show’s titular vice president, Selina Meyer, who soon begins to climb (and then fall back down) the political ladder. For much of its earlier seasons, the show derived a lot of its humor from how impotent the office of the vice president is and how little respect Selina could garner. But as it grew and switched showrunners from creator Armando Iannucci to comedy TV vet Dave Mandel, Veep became more about power and the withered, blackened souls that who seek it. Hilarious! - AB

The Best Animated Shows of the 2010s

Attack on Titan Season 3 Episode 8 Still

Attack on Titan 

Anime is more mainstream than ever before with more and more actors, athletes, and other public figures singing its praises. Still, every now and then there’s an anime series that goes seriously mainstream. Attack on Titan is one of those blessed few. Over three superb seasons this decade, Attack on Titan followed the story of a human society living within a many walled city to protect themselves from enormous, violent creatures known as Titans. As protagonist Eren and his friends delve into the mystery of the Titans they reach further and further into the mystery of their own past. Ultimately Attack on Titan understands that the only thing more terrifying than a horde of cannibalistic giants is ourselves. - AB

BoJack Horseman Season 6 on Netflix

BoJack Horseman 

BoJack Horseman didn’t put its best foot forward when it premiered in 2014. The first half of the show’s first season was an intriguing enough comedy about anthropomorphic animals in Hollywood but didn’t elevate itself to a classic until it began to delve deep into the damaged psyche of its titular horse. Six seasons later and BoJack Horseman is an indelible part of this decade of television and one of the most touching, devastating series ever. - AB

The Legend of Korra

The Legend of Korra

The much anticipated follow-up to Avatar: The Last Airbender had a lot to live up to and it did all that and more. Not content with being a simple sequel featuring the same cast, The Legend of Korra jumped the story into the future and let us see how the world of Avatar had grown and changed. While ATLA had been set in a simpler time before the widespread use of technology, Korra had to deal with a time period more akin to the roaring '20s with rapidly evolving technology. This set the stage for some of the series' most important political and social elements that gave Korra and her team more than enough to face off against.

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Korra especially didn't take any nonsense and was the exact kind of hero that made her perfectly stand apart from ATLA's Aang. Her growth throughout the series was extraordinary and the final season stands as the best stretch of episodes in the entire franchise. ATLA instantly became a modern-day classic but Korra helped prove the franchise had legs beyond that initial story. It showed the ATLA universe can handle all kinds of characters, philosophical dilemmas, and that even with huge changes it can still be just as good (and even better) than what came before. - Shamus Kelley

Rick and Morty's Best Weird Moments

Rick and Morty

One hundred years from now, we’ll have finally moved on after the final episode of Rick and Morty airs. At that point, it’ll be hard to put into context how much of a cultural phenomenon this show was in the 2010s. Justin Roiland and Dan Harmon came up with the concept of a mad scientist grandfather and his halfwit grandson who go on epic space adventures. It spawned an obsessive fan base and unparalleled merchandising opportunities as limitless as the infinite realities Rick loves to jabber on about.

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Funny-looking aliens and funny-looking Mortys are surely part of the allure of the show, but Roiland, Harmon, and the rest of the creative team have poured their soul into intricately-plotted and deeply thoughtful storylines with astronomically high levels of jokes per minute (we counted) that have raised the bar for animated comedy. The intense amount of writing and animation scrutiny has led to some frustration amongst fans for the long periods of hiatus between seasons. It’s all been worth it: a “bad” episode of Rick and Morty, if such a thing exists, would be the pinnacle for a hell of a lot of other TV shows. - CL

Steven Universe Future Episode 9 Little Graduation

Steven Universe 

TV series, especially animated ones, have evolved in many incredible ways over the decade but few have done more to demonstrate what is possible with its format than Steven Universe. While starting off as a more self-contained and episodic wacky series, the creators slowly built up a roster of characters and stories that became so much more than anyone could have ever thought possible. From the unprecedented queer representation to the emotional storytelling that forms the core of the main arc of the series, Steven Universe isn't just content telling an engaging story. It wants to leave you with something more substantial to think on long after it's done. - SK

Voltron: Legendary Defender

Voltron: Legendary Defender

The new gold-standard for updating an '80s kids show, or even how reboots should be handled in general, Voltron: Legendary Defender quickly stepped out of the giant robot sized shadow of the original and blazed its own path. Everything about the series worked, from its smart updates of the mecha and characters to its galaxy of aliens and worlds. No other show inspired this kind of fertile ground for spin-off material (which we still badly want, DreamWorks!). But the things that stick most with you are the cast, including the villains. The work that was done with them throughout the series made you feel like they were your best friends and led to endless discussion for even the most minor of characters. Voltron: Legendary Defender should grow in popularity and affection over time and we can only hope this isn't the last we'll see from this version of the series. It was truly something special. - SK

The Best Sci-Fi, Fantasy, and Horror Shows of the 2010s

Clarke in The 100 Season 6 Season Finale

The 100

When The 100 was first advertised, it had the look of the worst kind of CW stereotype. Teens coming from space in a sort of millennial take on Lord of the Flies, with fewer shirts and a heftier dose of, "we're back, bitches!" But the post-apocalyptic science fiction show quickly matured, showing far greater depth and higher stakes, with the staying power to go along with it. For one thing, in the world of The 100, almost all authority figures are (without fanfare) women and teenage girls, whether they're brutal warriors, brilliant tacticians, bleeding hearts trying to keep everyone from coming to blows, or some combination of the three. The allegory that is The 100 complicates the American origin story by showing the brutality and thoughtlessness of the Sky People and illuminating Grounder culture to complicate the narratives the Sky People like to tell themselves, not allowing for a neat and tidy us-versus-them narrative.

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There are famously no good guys in the world of The 100, but the characters we root for are the ones who try to understand other factions, minimize violence, and make the best of the bad choices they regularly face. Unlike so many other shows, The 100 doesn't let its characters off the hook. From the season 1 reveal of a sweet little girl committing murder and the devastating events that follow, when The 100 sets up a premise, it follows through, in brutal order. And once again, unlike so many other shows commonly perceived as more prestigious or more grown up, the characters on The 100 actually have to live with their trauma, physical and emotional. - DH

black mirror season 5 optimistic technology

Black Mirror

Charlie Brooker got so good at predicting the future that he had to set episodes of the more recent seasons of Black Mirror even further into the future so time wouldn’t catch up with him. That’s an impressive track record, but a scary proposition considering the bleak outlook many episodes of the tech-focused anthology series tend to have. During the 2010s, Black Mirror was the poster child for audiences falling back in love with the idea of anthology television, prompting a chorus of critics to christen it a Twilight Zone for the modern age. Only time will tell if Brooker’s cautionary tales of techno-paranoia will be as lasting as Rod Serling’s work, but high points like “Be Right Back,” “USS Calister,” and “San Junipero,” amongst so many others, are deeply affecting studies of technology’s impact on humanity that will be revisited for some time. -CL

Amos, Holden, Naomi, and Alex in The Expanse season 4

The Expanse

Not many shows improve with age, but The Expanse, which has its roots in the sprawling James S. A. Corey series of novels, has gotten better and better each season since it premiered in 2015. The space-centered, hard sci-fi series gained strength from its realistic depiction of space travel by refusing to wave away the laws of physics with things like artificial gravity, teleportation, shields, or laser weapons. Instead, The Expanse focused on political conflicts between factions within our own solar system while introducing, season by season, the threat of a long-dead but still dangerous ancient alien civilization. Because the show centered around the actions of a scrappy, ragtag crew of unlikely heroes, Holden, Naomi, Alex, and Amos quickly became fan favorites and, over time, like family. - MA

Game of Thrones Finale Dany

Game of Thrones

Put aside your feelings about the finale for a moment and consider the pop cultural juggernaut that was HBO’s Game of Thrones during the ‘10s. Prior to Game of Thrones’ premiere television was on a serious artistic upswing but still lacked one important element native to its filmic counterparts: Spectacle. That all changed this decade with the excellent, excessive, and expensive fantasy series based off George R.R. Martin’s previously thought to be unadaptable books. Game of Thrones accomplished big feats that no other TV show had been able to before this decade. Not only that, but it had the audacity to tell an incredible, intensely real and political story to boot...for at least six seasons. - AB

The Haunting of Hill House; Netflix

The Haunting of Hill House

When looking at television as a whole in the 2010s, adaptations, remakes, and reboots were a major storyline. Some of the more successful ones decided to deviate from their source material and instead “remix” the original work. Mike Flanagan opted for the remix route with his Netflix adaptation of Shirley Jackson’s iconic 1959 ghost story The Haunting of Hill House. Flanagan took major liberties–setting the story around a family with new characters, switching between past and present timelines, and modernizing the themes of the book–while still capturing the essence of the novel.

Jackson’s novel is chilling, particularly in its final chapters, but Flanagan evenly disperses the horror over its 10 episodes and creepy creations like like “Bent-Neck Lady” helped cemented the writer/director as one of the new masters of horror for the decade. His real achievement with Hill House was that the scares always felt secondary because the family story at the heart of the show powered the storytelling engine - punctuated by a masterclass in screenwriting with “Two Storms,” alternative perspectives from a family experience from the past and in the present at a funeral. There’s a reason Flanagan will be bringing most of his tremendous cast back for an entirely new story in the second season of our new favorite horror anthology. - CL

David wages war

Legion

"Wait," we can hear you ask, "doesn't this belong in the superhero section of this article?" No. No it does not. Ostensibly an X-Men spinoff, and yes its title character was a mutant (the son of none other than Charles Xavier), Legion was three seasons of psychedelic weirdness only barely disguised by its genre trappings. While it never matched the sheer perfection of its first season, it still remains the most visually (and musically) ambitious major franchise spinoff ever. Fans may be rejoicing that Disney's acquisition of 20th Century Fox has brought the X-Men and all related characters "home" to the MCU, but let us assure you: Disney will never allow something as gloriously bonkers and beautiful as Legion to make it to the screen ever again. If you haven't had the pleasure to meet David Haller, fix yourself something, turn down the lights, turn up the speakers, and settle in for a real trip. - MC

The Cast of The Magicians

The Magicians

The Magicians doesn’t have to be as good as it is. Syfy’s adaptation of Lev Grossman’s bestselling fantasy series could just be a clever, millennial-driven subversion of fantasy tropes from culturally foundational works like The Chronicles of Narnia and Harry Potter, and it would probably still deserve a spot on this list. But this weird, wonderful, and often laugh out loud funny series also has some of the best character work on television, prioritizing the emotional throughlines of its ensemble over all else—even when those same characters are engaged in some of the most intentionally outlandish storylines this side of Riverdale. From its annual musical episode to one of the more fully-realized survivor character arcs on television, The Magicians has more than one spell up its sleeve. - KB

The Mandalorian

The Mandalorian

For decades, fans have wondered what a live action Star Wars TV series might look like. Often rumored but never realized, there was often talk of a small screen visit to the galaxy far, far away, but it never amounted to more than just that. That is, until The Mandalorian rode into town courtesy of Disney+. Mixing elements of spaghetti westerns and samurai epics like Lone Wolf and Cub, The Mandalorian used familiar Star Wars imagery to tell a stark, gritty tale centered around its laconic, helmeted hero. The genuine pop culture phenomenon of Baby Yoda alone would be enough to guarantee its place on this list (and our hearts), but the show’s embrace of the kind of world building that made Star Wars so appealing in the first place may be its greatest accomplishment. - MC

Best Pop Culture Russians Helena Tatiana Maslany Orphan Black

Orphan Black

Orphan Black hooked viewers with its initial premise: what do you do when someone who looks just like you dies at your feet? But the conspiracy behind the sisterhood of clones went much deeper than that, and the remarkable performance of lead actor Tatiana Maslany; who gave Sarah, Cosima, Alison, Helena, and several other duplicates unique personalities and distinct motivations; drew fans in even more. Orphan Black managed to infuse humor and gender identity issues into its compelling central mystery with admirable expertise, and the show built a loyal following for its humble network, BBC America, during its 2013-2017 run. - MA

Stranger Things Season 4 Story

Stranger Things

In an era where established IP, nostalgia, and reboots rules every screen, big or small, Stranger Things arrived seemingly from nowhere in the summer of 2016 and captured the collective imagination like only a...well, like only a nostalgic love letter to IP of days gone by could. But the true appeal of Stranger Things is in its authenticity. Far more than mere pastiche or homage, what is now the flagship Netflix Original hits that rare period piece sweet spot in how it doesn’t just evoke its early 1980s era, but feels like it’s actually of its era. Mixing effective scares with perhaps the best young ensemble cast in modern TV history and eye-popping special effects with lovingly recreated 1980s details, Stranger Things is like a genre unicorn, and not even the legion of imitators it will inevitably spawn will ever be able to diminish that. - MC

The Walking Dead Season 10 Zombies

The Walking Dead

Well...it’s had its moments. The Walking Dead has certainly been one of, if not the most inconsistent series on this list. That’s bound to happen when a network cycles through showrunners at a rate of one per every two seasons and makes clear that they never want their cash cow show to ever end. On a creative level, the deck is very much stacked against The Walking Dead. Its creative team has had to balance their story, Robert Kirkman’s original vision, and the zombie empire aspirations of their corporate parents. Which makes it even more impressive when the darn thing works. The Walking Dead at its best, including seasons 1, 4, 5, 9, and 10 offers up some of the most exciting genre storytelling we have on television. - AB

HBO Westworld Season 3 News

Westworld

Who ever would have thought that a TV show based on a middling, barely-remembered Michael Crichton movie would turn into a critical darling and pop culture brain twister, right? While Westworld’s second season didn’t quite scale the bizarro intellectual heights of its first (and its upcoming third season looks like it’s about to revamp the concept almost completely), that first season alone would still be enough to guarantee this HBO series a place on this list. Western flavor, dystopian sci-fi, and the moral, ethical, and sexual issues of the inevitable advances of artificial intelligence combine with competing timelines and general weirdness to make Westworld one of the most unique shows in HBO history. - MC

Wynonna Earp on Syfy

Wynonna Earp

In a decade in which mainstream storytellers were continuously undervaluing queer fans by ignoring, sidelining, or killing off queer characters, Wynonna Earp became a safe harbor for women and queer fans alike to see characters who look and live like them fight monsters, drink whiskey, and lead generally messy lives. A supernatural western romp of a show, Wynonna Earp is more than just a story about the descendant of Wyatt Earp, cursed to vanquish the resurrected outlaws her great-great-granddaddy first killed, it’s a (found) family drama that is as hilarious as it is heartfelt, led by one of the most empathetic showrunners on TV and supported by one of the nicest fandoms in the Ghost River Triangle and beyond. - KB

The Best Superhero Shows of the 2010s

Arrow Season 8 Story

Arrow

The show that turned Greg Berlanti into the busiest man in the TV business. The show that launched the largest live-action exploration of the DC universe in history. The show that launched four spinoffs (and counting). The show that successfully made Green Arrow, of all frakkin’ characters, into a household name. The show that somehow, despite consistently putting on the most spectacular action sequences and fight scenes week after week for eight consecutive seasons, somehow still doesn’t have a single Emmy nomination to its name (that’s really gotta change). And through it all, we’ve had series lead Stephen Amell, one of the most convincing actors to ever play a superhero, whose performance became increasingly layered and sympathetic with each passing season. With a terrific cast who are aided and abetted by an incredible team of directors, fight coordinators, and stuntpeople, Arrow has consistently delivered a weekly dose of action movie excitement in the DC Universe. We're gonna miss it when it's gone. - MC

Black Lightning Season 2: Cress Williams as Jefferson Pierce

Black Lightning

Black Lightning may technically be an Arrowverse show, and Jefferson Pierce and his family are certainly DC Comics characters, but this series has always had more important things to worry about than its CW cousins. Embracing nighttime action sequences with an enthusiasm that not even the generally nocturnal Arrowhas (the better to spotlight the title character's incredibly cool costume and electric superpowers) and filmed in Atlanta rather than Vancouver, Black Lightning isn't remotely concerned with the goings on of the wider DC Universe and instead puts its focus on the immediate problems in the city of Freeland, like institutional racism, drugs, and education and family issues. Via its superhero story veneer, Black Lightning has drawn parallels to modern issues like Black Lives Matter and past horrors like the Tuskegee experiment with ease, keeping its social conscience at the forefront of its storytelling. It's possible that we'll see more of the Pierce family in the main Arrowverse after Crisis on Infinite Earths concludes, which should draw more eyes to what has been the very best of these shows since its premiere.  - MC

Charlie Cox in Netflix's Daredevil Season 3

Daredevil

While the grand Marvel Netflix partnership has come to an end in favor of an MCU-centric future on Disney+, Daredevil will always be first in our hearts. Opting for an occasionally foul mouthed, often graphically violent street level realism, Daredevil was as much the story of Wilson Fisk (Vincent D’Onfrio) and his rise to the top of the criminal heap in New York City as it was about Matt Murdock (Charlie Cox) and his moonlighting as a masked vigilante. Over the course of three seasons, Daredevil gave us a series of unforgettable performances (including Jon Bernthal as the Punisher) and some of the most convincing, brutal, and innovative fight scenes ever seen in a superhero property on the big or small screen. Don’t be surprised if Daredevil eventually returns in some form in the MCU, but we’ll be shocked if it ever matches the intensity of its best moments on Netflix. - MC

The Flash Season 6 Episode 1 Review: Into the Void

The Flash

Jettisoning Arrow’s brooding in favor of more traditional brightly colored superheroics, and successfully making the Fastest Man Alive and his impressive power set look great on a TV budget, The Flash was an immediate hit both with CW viewers and longtime comic book readers thanks to its wholehearted embrace of one of the best (and most ridiculous) rogues’ galleries in the business, not to mention concepts like time travel, the multiverse, and the speed force. The show’s hopeful, optimistic, sometimes humorous take on the DC Universe set the tone for the next two Arrowverse success stories with Supergirl and Legends of Tomorrow and proved that a superhero show doesn’t need a high concept makeover to work on TV. The first and most successful Arrowverse spinoff might now be the most important show in the CW’s entire stable. - MC

Krysten Ritter Jessica Jones Season 3 Marvel Netflix

Jessica Jones

Jessica Jones stormed into our lives with a first season that came about as close to perfection as you can get. With her drinking, swearing, crappy office, poor life skills and same old pair of ripped jeans, Jessica is outside the bounds of what women protagonists are usually allowed to be. Krysten Ritter brought her perfectly to life from the pages of comic books as Jess actively rejected the superhero mantle and often made bad, selfish choices. It's impossible to separate the character from the show - she was the show. Yes, Rachael Taylor's Trish was a great addition, her relationship to Luke Cage was unparalleled, gender-swapping frosty Jeryn Hogarth and casting Carrie-Ann Moss was genius and Eka Darville's Malcolm was the show's moral compass, but Jess carried the weight of the world on her shoulders.

A survivor of the insidious abuse of David Tennant's Kilgrave, she has meant so much to those of us who don't get to see ourselves on screen in a meaningful, interesting, no-bullshit way. With a road to recovery that lasted the entirety of her series and had no easy answers, Jessica Jones was so different from the disappointing eye roll-inducing girl power we often have to accept. It's unfortunate that the show didn't quite know how to keep things interesting enough without Kilgrave, but that doesn't diminish the show's impact. - DH

Luke Cage Season 2 Promo

Luke Cage

Sure, Luke Cage was the third Marvel Netflix collaboration (after Daredevil and Jessica Jones), and by the time this show started streaming, some of the novelty around having an R-rated corner of the MCU had already worn off. While the show had to carry the usual Marvel/Netflix burden of having a few too many episodes per season, it was still so packed with lore (of both the comic book and real variety) and so stylish that it was easy to forgive the occasional pacing issue.

The rare adaptation that surpasses its source material more because of its departures, Luke Cage felt impossibly fresh, thanks in no small part to stunning performances from heavy hitters like Mahershala Ali and Alfre Woodard, and a star-making turn by Mike Colter as the title character. Soundtracking the series with an endless supply of old school hip-hop and classic soul made the atmosphere, and the addition an original score unmatched in the entirety of Marvel's screen output was next level, but dropping beautifully filmed "live" performances at the Paradise nightclub into numerous episodes made Luke Cage unlike any other superhero show in history, let alone on Netflix. - MC

Regina King as Sister Night in HBO's Watchmen Episode 2

Watchmen

There should never be a Watchmen adaptation or sequel on television. On this much we all agreed upon going into 2019. And on this much we are all completely, blessedly wrong. HBO’s Watchmen expands upon Alan Moore and Dave Gibbons’ essential original text and brings the narrative into an uncanny approximation of our modern world where the politicians, heroes, and villains, may be different but America’s legacy of hate remains the same. Damon Lindelof, his writing staff, the cast, and every one else involved did the impossible this decade and made a Watchmen sequel feel not only welcome, but necessary. - AB

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Dec 31, 2019

Star Wars Movie and TV Release Date Calendar

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The complete schedule of upcoming Star Wars movies and TV series on Disney+! What's next after The Rise of Skywalker? Find out here.

The Star Wars saga will continue long after the final chapter of the Sequel Trilogy, The Rise of Skywalker! The Skywalker Saga may be coming to a close, but there are still plenty of Star Wars movies and TV shows in the works.

This is the page where we'll keep track of all the upcoming Star Wars movie and TV releases. It might not look like much, but she's got it where it counts. Hit the blue links in each entry to read articles that tell you more about what you need to know about all these new Star Wars adventures!

First up are the movies but scroll down for TV release dates...

Star Wars Movies

Star Wars Art

Untitled Star Wars Movie

December 16, 2022

Disney has confirmed that the Star Wars movie franchise will continue in 2022 with three new, currently untitled films. What could these projects be? Well, this was one of the movies being developed by Game of Thrones creators David Benioff and D.B. Weiss until their sudden departure from the project in October 2019. They cited scheduling conflicts as the reason for their exit from their highly-publicized deal with Lucasfilm, but reports say it goes deeper than that. 

Benioff and Weiss were reportedly interested in making a trilogy of movies about the origin of the Jedi, but the studio and the creators were in disagreement about the direction of the films. It remains to be seen if Lucasfilm will tap another filmmaker to take on a Jedi origin story or if they're scrapping the idea altogether. Perhaps this might be a good slot to put that rumored Knights of the Old Republic movie?

In any case, don't be surprised if this ends up getting pulled from the schedule entirely. But as of now, Disney still has this date reserved for a Star Wars movie, and what the Mouse wants, the Mouse usually gets.

Rian Johnson - New Star Wars Trilogy Writer

Untitled Star Wars Movie

December 20, 2024

Fortunately, The Last Jedi director Rian Johnson is still working on his own Star Wars trilogy. All we know about these movies is that this will take place in previously unexplored areas of the Star Wars universe, and it will kick off a brand new saga of films completely unrelated to the Skywalker story. We wrote in more detail about what that might mean for the franchise right here.

Perhaps this will be the trilogy to take over the Benioff/Weiss slots. On the other hand, maybe Johnson's recent comments about what a mistake it is to pander to fans are an indication that his relationship with Disney has soured.

Read more about this new Star Wars trilogy here.

Star Wars Exar Kun

Untitled Star Wars Movie

December 18, 2026

Your guess is as good as ours as to what movie might end up occupying this slot. Disney seems to be rethinking a lot of their Star Wars movie strategy in favor of a more TV focused approach on Disney+. Which brings us to...

Star Wars TV

The Clone Wars Season 7

February 2020 on Disney+

Showrunner: Dave Filoni

Starring: Ashley Eckstein, Matt Lanter, James Arnold Taylor

The Clone Wars animated series is making a surprise return on Disney+. We don't know too much about the new season except that part of it will take place on Mandalore and that it will follow the story of Ahsoka Tano after she left the Jedi Order. 

Read more about the new season of The Clone Wars here. 

Star Wars - The Mandalorian

The Mandalorian Season 2

Coming Fall 2020

Synopsis: No details about the new season of The Mandalorian are currently available. You can keep up with all the updates on The Mandalorian season 2 as we get them right here.

Star Wars - Cassian Andor

Cassian Andor Series

Date TBA

Writer: Tony Gilroy

Stream your Star Wars favorites on Disney+ with a FREE TRIAL, on us!

Starring: Diego Luna & Alan Tudyk

There's a Rogue One spinoff series starring Rebel secret agent Cassian Andor coming to Disney+! According to the press release, "The rousing spy thriller will explore tales filled with espionage and daring missions to restore hope to a galaxy in the grip of a ruthless Empire." This sounds very good.

Read more about the Cassian Andor series here.

Star Wars - Obi-Wan Kenobi

Obi-Wan Kenobi Series

Date TBA

Director: Deborah Chow

Writer: Hossein Amini

Starring: Ewan McGregor

Ewan McGregor is finally returning to the role of Obi-Wan Kenobi in a series set between Revenge of the Sith and A New Hope. The Jedi Master has settled into his life as an exile on Tatooine, where he's watching over Luke Skywalker from afar. Will his next adventure take him off-world or is he going to have to protect a defenseless village from raiders Toshiro Mifune style? We'll find out soon enough!

We wrote more about the Obi-Wan series right here.

John Saavedra is an associate editor at Den of Geek. Read more of his work here. Follow him on Twitter @johnsjr9

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Star Wars Movie and TV Release Date Calendar
NewsJohn Saavedra
Dec 31, 2019
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