[Orcs grunt respectfully], daddy issues, and speculation corner in this week’s RINGS OF POWER
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer
Foreshadowing and daddy issues!
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer
Foreshadowing and daddy issues!
by Ryan Silberstein, Managing Editor, Red Herring
Andor is focused on how a spark becomes a blazing Rebellion, and starts on a smaller, more intimate scale.
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer
Tolkien’s world has always been, in part, about the power of friendship. Mixed in with the destiny, lore, and language, friendship is an integral part of life.
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer
It’s wonderful to see Middle-Earth at this caliber again!
by Ian Hrabe, Staff Writer
There are a dozen characters with these super satisfying decades-long story arcs, and it’s truly impressive how the writers’ room makes you love all of them.
by Emily Maesar, Associate Editor, TVJawn
Resistance is futile.
by Billy Russell, Staff Writer
Frankie Quinones as the ne’er-do-well-though-he-tries Luis in Hulu’s new series This Fool has that certain “it factor.”
by Emily Maesar, Associate Editor, TVJawn
Growing up, Wet Hot was one of those older sibling films—the kind that basically live in your head rent free, that get quoted all the time, and that you might not really understand until you’re older and watch it with different eyes.
by Alex Rudolph, Staff Writer
This was a tightly packed episode of Better Call Saul, no longer than any of the previous installments, and it still took plenty of time for the quiet that fills so much of its normal space.
by Alex Rudolph, Staff Writer
The discrepancy between my assumptions and the writers' decisions is sometimes even wider than I'd come to understand it to be.
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer
While I think the first episode is a little rocky, A League of Their Own really finds its footing over the course of the season.
by Alex Rudolph, Staff Writer
We didn't know much going into this season of Better Call Saul, but there was one guarantee: Bryan Cranston and Aaron Paul would return as Walter White and Jesse Pinkman.
by Emily Maesar, Associate Editor, TVJawn
Thirteen days after the United States 1988 election, the second season of Star Trek: The Next Generation aired
by Alex Rudolph, Staff Writer
In this episode, for the first time, the tape ends and we're abruptly left looking at a blue screen.
by Alex Rudolph, Staff Writer
There's a lot of covered ground here, but the heart of the episode comes in the last ten minutes and, if you're anything like me, it's what you've been anticipating since the show premiered in 2015.
by Alex Rudolph, Staff Writer
So what did we get in the first of our last Saul episodes?
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer
Love, Simon gets a bit of flack for being too cliche and sanitized.
by Emily Maesar, Associate Editor, TVJawn
And just like that, we’re watching Star Trek again.
by Emily Maesar, Associate Editor, TVJawn
What starts as a fairly standard, albeit odd, episodic show about two pre-teen twins dealing with weird stuff and learning lessons over a summer without their parents, turns into a desperate attempt to save the world from forces bigger than themselves.
by Megan Bailey, Staff Writer & Emily Maesar, Associate Editor, TVJawn
You don’t have Daddy Issues; instead your father simply has Bad Dad Syndrome because he’s the one who caused all the problems in the first place.