TNT’s latest original series, Trust Me, too frequently falls back on familiar TV tropes.
The limitations of making an HBO-style drama on basic cable become readily apparent when arguments climax with an underwhelming “Screw you!”
Lie to Me’s science gimmick is sure to wane thin soon into its short first season, a truth that doesn’t bode well for a series renewal.
Curb Your Enthusiasm’s harping on Larry’s hyper-realized worldview and his general “outsider” relationship to humanity still surprises.
The show tries to balance its seriousness with unexpected flashes of humor that almost always fall flat.
What seemed so promising at the end of Rome’s last season seems to have lost its way in these new episodes.
The album, despite its sparseness, presents a classic rock group at the height of their abilities.
Heroes is a popcorn-fueled look into the comic-book universe minus the usual slew of acrobatic fight scenes.
Inevitably, all of 2Pac’s posthumous releases must contend with the albums produced during his lifetime.
Jericho treads on ground we’ve already covered and should at least know how to handle more originally.
Dr. Gregory House returns for a third season in the show that bears his name and, at first, he’s surprisingly less of a curmudgeon.
It looks as though Smith will be another victim of a good idea given a poor execution.
Amputechture shows a band honing their eruptive sound and bringing it into tight focus for the first time.
There’s enough working here to make watching a TV show about TV all the more enticing.