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'House of Guinness' Review: Netflix's 19th-Century Family Saga
TV & Streaming

‘House of Guinness’ Review: Netflix’s 19th-Century Family Saga

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Netflix’s House of Guinness, the new 19th-century drama from Peaky Blinders and A Thousand Blows creator Steven Knight, knows the value of a big, splashy moment.

Its characters, the most central of whom are the scions of Ireland’s most famous ale-brewing family, do not simply go down the stairs when they can glide in slow-motion to the moody strains of an Irish rock soundtrack. They do not walk around building demolitions when they can sail through as explosions go off in the background, action-movie-style. They make impassioned declarations of love or fury, and trade metaphor-laden speeches; occasionally, when words fall short, they set literal fires.

House of Guinness

The Bottom Line

Considerably less dark and bitter than its namesake ale.

Airdate: Thursday, Sep. 25 (Netflix)
Cast: Anthony Boyle, Louis Partridge, James Norton, Emily Fairn, Fionn O’Shea, Niamh McCormack, Jack Gleeson, Danielle Galligan, Ann Skelly, Seamus O’Hara
Creator: Steven Knight

What all of it amounts to, once the fizz has settled, is somehow both more and less substance than you might expect. If House of Guinness knows how to grab a viewer’s attention, it’s less concerned with shading in the nuances that might lend the series emotional heft to go with its epic sprawl and electric energy. But when a series is this good at keeping the good times flowing, it’s hard not to get a bit swept up in its veritable rivers of drama.

The story begins, as so many others have as of late, with a powerful and wealthy clan facing an apparent succession crisis. The year is 1868 and Benjamin Guinness, the richest man in the country, has just died, leaving his four squabbling adult children to try and carry on the family’s legacy.

As the eldest son, Arthur (Anthony Boyle, who seems so at home in the 19th century it’s a wonder he’s actually from the 21st) would seem Daddy’s most obvious heir — if not for his utter disinterest in the family trade and his outright desperation to escape the expectations of the family name. It’s pragmatic-to-a-fault youngest brother Edward (Louis Partridge) who possesses both the ambition and the aptitude to run the company, but not the assumption of primogeniture.

Middle son Benjamin (Fionn O’Shea) is the black sheep of the bunch, battling alcoholism, gambling addiction and a general lack of self-esteem. Rounding out the mourning quartet is their sister Anne (Emily Fairn), physically sickly, emotionally brittle and unequivocally devout. Both Anne and Benjamin are quickly disabused of any illusion that their father might have taken them seriously as contributors to the business, let alone potential successors.

As if the infighting weren’t enough, the Guinnesses are also beset by outside forces from seemingly every side of the cultural spectrum. The Irish independence-supporting Fenians, represented primarily by hotheaded oaf Paddy (Seamus O’Hara) and his more strategically minded sister Ellen (Niamh McCormack), loathe the family’s conservative unionist policies. Religious forces, spearheaded by an unpleasant Guinness uncle (Michael Colgan), decry the immorality of the booze they’re selling.

Tensions come to a head in the opening minutes of the Tom Shankland-directed premiere, as protesters from every camp converge upon the old man’s funeral procession, and hammer-wielding company men prepare to fight back. “The name’s Guinness. Of course there’ll be fucking trouble,” smirks brewery foreman and fixer Rafferty, whose theatrical tendencies are not so much performed by James Norton as savored like a juicy steak. Of course, he’s right.

But the fact that nothing truly disturbing happens in that first scene might be the first hint that House of Guinness is willing to pull its punches, for better and for worse. Succession this is not, at least when it comes to the brutally unflattering and emotionally punishing portrayal of the one-percent. These upper-crust elites are ones we’re meant, at the end of the day, to sympathize with and root for.

The show is by no means blind to the dark and sweeping social forces shaping the times, up to and including the extreme inequality that allows the Guinnesses to get ice shipped in special from Greenland while cholera-stricken villagers just a mile down the road struggle to find clean water. Nor is it entirely worshipful of the Guinnesses. Even as the clan get more involved in charity, or soften their previously firm unionist stance, the series makes a point of showing that they’re motivated as much by the promise of good PR as they are by a sincere desire to effect positive change.

Still, the show stops short of wrestling with either the characters’ complicity in injustice or their evolving feelings in any real detail. In contrast to the recent wave of shows and films painting the super-wealthy as greedy, cruel or plain stupid, the Guinnesses we follow are only ever truly guilty of obliviousness. Likewise, early hints at darker character flaws — like that Edward might become drunk on power or that Rafferty might have a sadistic streak — tend to dissipate as the characters grow or deepen.

In truth, a damning portrait of the family was probably never in the cards, considering the series counts among its executive producers actual Guinness descendant Ivana Lowell. And the choice to soften the characters as the eight-episode season goes on has the benefit of making them easy to feel for as each gets increasingly caught up in tragic love affairs. (I’ll leave the specifics for you to discover, but suffice it to say that a lawyer handling the family’s scandals jokes, “Infidelity. Sodomy. Lost love and random acts of violence. A more typical Dublin family would be hard to find.”)

But here, too, the choice to prioritize high-drama plot beats over incremental evolution yields mixed results. On one hand, the no-fat approach keeps the pacing brisk, and allows for thrilling shit-just-got-real moments like the introduction of Olivia (a dazzling Danielle Galligan), Anthony’s appropriately aristocratic but shockingly no-bullshit future wife.

On the other, it keeps us at an arm’s length. Benjamin and Anne, particularly, become characters who resurface only to show us how much they’ve changed offscreen, without allowing us to see how or why they’ve transformed so much. And more than one load-bearing romance centers around characters who seem inexorably drawn together mainly because the plot demands it, not because we understand precisely what it is that either party finds so beguiling in the other.

That the drama nevertheless makes it work more often than not — that I found myself “aw”-ing over Anthony’s heartbreak or tutting at Benjamin’s self-destructive foibles or cheering at a bold but staggeringly ill-advised choice made by Olivia late in the season — is a testament, again, to the series understanding the power of a big moment. As firmly as its characters believe in God or commerce or Irish independence, House of Guinness places its faith in the notion that a kiss or a speech or a punch, delivered with enough style and passion, can sell just about anything. More often than not, it’s right.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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View from My Sofa: Eric Idle
TV & Streaming

View from My Sofa: Eric Idle

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Are you watching anything else?

Television now seems to be people trying to bonk each other on islands, game shows or news shows, so it’s not terribly interesting. I mean, it’s been stolen by the streamers, which is really bad news. They’ve uninvented television and it’s very sad.

Do you miss watching television?

Growing up, my generation – so that’s all of the Pythons – grew up without television. That’s quite a big difference, rarely observed. We grew up with radio, where the words involve your imagination much more. On radio, the Goons could set the Thames on fire.

Is listening to radio where your love of language comes from?

It meant we had a bias towards language; Terry Gilliam was the one putting in all the imagery. If you look at the Python sketches that are really funny, they all evolved from language – Argument Clinic, for example. Later, as we did on a couple of German shows, they were largely visual sketches. But that was because we had to learn them in German and we didn’t want to talk.

When did you realise that you were on to something with Monty Python?

When we were given our TV show, it was late on a Sunday night and the BBC was just trying to see if anybody was awake after 10pm and the pubs were closed. What was really lovely was that we could please ourselves, there was no one overseeing us, so it was executive-free comedy and all the funnier for it. No executive has ever improved a comedy.

What makes you laugh today?

What South Park is doing with Trump is heroic and I know they’ve done him a lot of damage. There’s a reason Hitler and Trump get rid of the comedians first. They hate being laughed at. So, it’s great that Governor Newsom is taking the p*** out of Trump and his hands. Comedy is saying the right thing at the wrong time. It’s so important. It’s telling truth to power and it’s keeping people sane. I was in the war, we laughed at Hitler and it makes a difference because it diminishes their power. I think it connects with an undercurrent of anti- and that’s vital. Stephen Colbert [who just won an Emmy as host of the US Late Show] was fired by his network very pusillanimously, but he’s got till May to say anything he likes.

You’re prodigious in your output. Where do you get your work ethic from?

I think it comes from boarding school. I was there for 12 years in Wolverhampton, and it wasn’t the most exciting place to be. Reading became a great escape. And the older you got, the more you wanted to read. History and literature is fascinating. I like geography, too. I made my own escape.

You’re touring again. What appeals about performing live?

I’ve always liked getting out there. On that stage, you must make the audience laugh, and if you do, you can surf that laughter; it lifts you up. So I’ve tried to go on stage at least once a year, especially in my later years, because it’s important to scare yourself, and to make sure you’ve still got that skill.

Is it a farewell tour?

Everywhere should always be goodbye. At my age [82], most of your friends are dead, which isn’t great. But it’s important to remember them, and remember them as funny. In my show, I talk about and show clips of old friends and sing songs about them. I sing a song called This May Be the Last Time You See Me, because it might be.

Your song Always Look on the Bright Side of Life gets played at funerals a lot. What will be played at yours?

Well, I used to say Sit on My Face, but my wife said I can’t say that any more.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Joy Behar and Sunny Hostin on The View
TV & Streaming

Joy Behar Reveals Rare Point of Agreement With Trump

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

On Thursday’s (September 25) edition of The View, the cohosts dissected the latest news involving Donald Trump: Days after he publicly pressured the attorney general to prosecute his political enemies, it is now reportedly expected that former FBI Director James Comey will face an indictment (by a Trump-appointed prosecutor with no previous experience in the field) related to his statements to Congress regarding election interference.

Comey has a complicated history with Trump. He was appointed by Barack Obama but was widely spurned by Democrats after he announced a new investigation into then-candidate Hillary Clinton over her use of a private email server just days before the 2016 election. He continued to serve in the role after Donald Trump was elected in 2016, but was fired a year later amid the investigation into Trump’s campaign’s ties to Russia. This ignited a special counsel investigation by Robert Mueller that plagued Trump’s first term. Trump has since repeatedly criticized Comey, including calling him a “dirty cop” in May.

The cohosts’ reaction to the matter of Comey’s potential prosecution was contentious, to say the least. Oddly enough, it was Joy Behar who expressed some sympathy for Trump’s position on Comey.

“I agree with Trump on this one,” she said. When prompted by her cohosts to explain, she continued, “I don’t like what he did to Hillary.”

When Sunny Hostin challenged whether it was “fair” that he should be prosecuted, Behar said, “No… Just saying, I rarely have something that I agree with Trump on. This is one thing.”

Hostin then pressed back again, saying, “But Joy, some would say he was just doing his job, James Comey.”

“What? At the last minute to bring out this email baloney?” said Behar.

When cohost Alyssa Farah Griffin said she didn’t need to “drudge up ancient history” on the matter, Behar asked her pointedly, “Do you agree with him?” And Griffin responded with, “I think that it should have been investigated. I do think the timing was out of step with the Department of Justice. They generally don’t do that a month out from an election.”

She then went on to discuss the matter at hand, which was the possibility of Comey’s prosecution, and she said, “I don’t think Trump’s goal is criminal convictions… I don’t think [the prosecutor is] going to be able to get a conviction based on what we know and the information that’s out there. [The goal] is to get these people wrapped up with legal fees. It’s to intimidate people from being critics of [Trump]. To him, I think it’s some degree of payback.”

When Griffin admitted that she’s not a legal expert, Hostin said with a snap, “Well, this legal expert is telling you he’s not going to get a conviction.”

The View, Weekdays 11 a.m. ET, ABC

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Kathryn Bigelow Directs Rebecca Ferguson
TV & Streaming

Kathryn Bigelow Directs Rebecca Ferguson

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84


A House of Dynamite Trailer: Kathryn Bigelow Directs Rebecca Ferguson




























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Idris Elba, Rebecca Ferguson, Gabriel Basso, Jared Harris, Tracy Letts, Anthony Ramos, Moses Ingram, and Jonah Hauer-King star in the Netflix film, which also features Greta Lee and Jason Clarke.

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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Evil Na'vi Origins Revealed, War on Sully
TV & Streaming

Evil Na’vi Origins Revealed, War on Sully

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

20th Century Studios has released a new trailer for “Avatar: Fire and Ash,” the third film in James Cameron‘s “Avatar” series, which is set to release on Dec. 19. The trailer shows the return of Jake Sully (Sam Worthington) and his family, this time at war with an enemy Na’vi tribe on Pandora.

Alongside Worthington, Zoe Saldaña, Sigourney Weaver, Stephen Lang, Kate Winslet, Bailey Bass, Britain Dalton, Trinity Bliss, Jack Champion and Edie Falco are among the returning cast members. Meanwhile, Michelle Yeoh, Oona Chaplin and David Thewlis will make their debut in the series as new characters.

The first “Avatar” released in 2009 and became the highest grossing film of all time at the worldwide box office. It still holds that record, with a lifetime gross of over $2.9 billion. It’s sequel, “Avatar: The Way of the Water,” came out over a decade later in 2022 and grossed $2.3 billion at the box office, surpassing Cameron’s own “Titanic” as the third highest grossing film of all time. The two “Avatar” titles’ performances are only split by “Avengers: Endgame,” which grossed $2.7 billion in 2019.

Documentaries aside, the “Avatar” movies have been Cameron’s only directorial features of the 21st century. Cameron began developing “Avatar” in the 1990s, but it took over a decade for technology to catch up with the concept. The films’ special effects are handled by Weta Workshop and showcase pioneering filmmaking technology in motion capture and CGI.

A fourth “Avatar” movie is already expected to release in 2029, and a fifth in 2031.

Watch the trailer below.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Playful Biopic Of The 20th Century's Most Influential Writer
TV & Streaming

Playful Biopic Of The 20th Century’s Most Influential Writer

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

“Franz is a writer who doesn’t like to talk,” says Franz Kafka’s agent in this playful and oddly endearing biopic of the enigmatic Czech author, who died in 1924 aged just 40. Kafka’s output was slim but influential, the film notes, reporting that works about Kafka outnumber pieces by him at a rate of 10 million to one. That ratio is more impressive given that they were smuggled out of Europe in a suitcase at the dawn of the Second World War, and, given Kafka’s Jewish roots, could very easily have been lost forever. Coincidentally, Agnieska Holland’s film Franz — which competes in Competition at this year’s San Sebastian Film Festival — appears shortly after the loss of another mighty 20th century artist, David Lynch, who described Kafka as “the one artist that I feel could be my brother”. Lynch would likely have approved of this experimental take on Kafka’s life, with its dryly humorous flourishes and rich, almost Magrittean color palette.

Like Lynch, Kafka’s work both invites interpretation and refuses it at the same time, and it’s to the director’s credit that Holland — working from an intelligent script by Marek Epstein — stays clear of amateur psychology. Though she does illustrate one of his key texts (the gruesome short story In the Penal Colony, which causes outrage at its first public reading), Holland doesn’t look to his life for explanations. Instead, by mapping out his relatively normal upbringing — there is nothing at all “Kafkaesque” about it, to use the word coined to describe his enduringly surreal and dark bureaucratic fables — Franz marvels at the depth and strangeness of his intellect, which confounds his overbearing father who takes a dim view of his son’s “stupid writing”.

Franz doesn’t say as much out loud, but it seems likely that Kafka was on what we now call the spectrum, as we see in an early scene where he demands change of a two-krone coin from a bemused street beggar. But part of Kafka’s drive is something altogether less tangible; art was soon to enter its avant-garde phase in the early 20th century, and the writer turns out to be much more bohemian than his bourgeois upbringing suggests, showing a keen interest in underground Yiddish theater. Key to understanding this is his bizarre relationship with Felice Bauer (Carol Schuler), his on-off fiancée; Kafka — played with a charismatic opacity by Idan Weiss — seems neither to find her attractive nor does he want to be with her, a tension that doesn’t quite pan out the way you might expect.

In the meantime, as Kafka finds his voice, so does Prague, and it’s significant that the film takes place against the gentrification of the Czech capital and its break with Germany as an occupying culture (Holland, who studied there as a student in the ’60s, seems especially alert to this particular paradigm shift). And aside from some very modern artistic flourishes — including the fact that each character around Kafka breaks the fourth wall to discuss him — Holland brings the film explicitly into the modern day by taking us to the Franz Kafka Museum and teasing us with the concept of a Kafka Burger restaurant. Adding to the otherworldly ambience is the shifting jazz-folk score by Mary Komasa and Antoni Łazarkiewicz, which, like our hero, is similarly protean in nature.

Kafka’s short life is convenient for the purposes of storytelling, and it fits quite neatly into the film’s two-hour running time. The writer’s illness — tuberculosis of the larynx — is seen as a particularly cruel horror, albeit one in lockstep with his morbid imagination, which continued to work overtime. Surprisingly, in contrast to perceptions of Kafka as an introverted artist, locked away in his lonely garret, Franz shows him as a relatively robust, if skinny, young man, given to frequent exercise and a regular patron of the most absurd sanatoriums in Europe, a cue for lots of very amusing — not to mention acrobatic — full-frontal male nudity.

The one constant in Holland’s film is an unusual one for a biopic; the traditional approach being that each individual presents different facets of their true selves to different people. But in Franz, Kafka is pretty resolute in his identity and his eccentricities, notably in his insistence on writing all his now-famous literary works by hand. Everyone around him can agree on who Franz Kafka is, the bigger question is what. As the museum tour guide puts it: “Kafka’s work is locked, and he took the keys with him.” Holland’s film — selected by Poland as this year’s Oscar contender — invites you to ponder the conundrum that he left behind.

Title: Franz
Festival: San Sebastian (Competition)
Director: Agnieska Holland
Screenwriter: Marek Epstein
Cast: Idan Weiss, Carol Schuler, Jenovéfa Boková, Peter Kurth, Ivan Trojan, Sandra Korzeniak, Katharina Stark, Sebastian Schwarz Aaron Friesz
Sales agent: Films Boutique
Running time: 2 hrs 7 mins

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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'South Park' Season 27, Episode 5; "Conflict of Interest"
TV & Streaming

‘South Park’ Bets on Mocking Social Gambling, Kyle’s Mom

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Predictive betting comes to South Park in episode five of the show’s sporadic yet highly-rated 27th season, when the odds on whether Kyle’s mom, who is a Jewish woman, will attack Gaza become a hot speculation at the elementary school.

It all starts with the kids of South Park Elementary placing bets on whether one of their own — a Boy Scout who insists on repeatedly informing the class that she is one of the group’s WeBlos — is a boy or a girl. Soon, Eric Cartman is going on about Kyle’s mom, one of his least favorite people in town but one he enjoys talking (and on the big screen, singing) about.

Back at the White House, Satan and President Trump are awaiting the birth of their child, who is likely to bring about the apocalypse, and are preparing for the little one’s arrival. A seemingly goober-like version of Vice President J.D. Vance is back, too, with bad news for Trump.

“Everyone is so excited for the baby,” Vance says. “Boss, you must be so excited as well. Yeah, well, excited, it is going to completely change your life, though…”

Naturally, this being South Park, Trump soon begins his efforts to kill his and Satan’s unborn child. Hi-jinks ensue. Vance’s motivations are also revealed later in the episode (but you all knew the Vice President of the United States was no goober, right?).

Plots in Washington and our favorite small Colorado mountain town once again merge after a phone call is placed from South Park to end the sports betting craze, via government intervention. FCC chief Brendan Carr ends up on the other end of the line from a frustrated Kyle and within about 10 seconds of his appearance on the show, he’s there with Trump and Satan, shitting so hard he flies around the room, and then in the hospital with a parasite called toxoplasmosis; it can be transferred from cats to humans and bring about some complications — in particular, for Carr, the loss of his freedom of speech.

As the tension around what Kyle’s mom Sheila will do about the Israel-Gaza atrocities reaches a fever pitch at South Park Elementary, she decides that it’s time that she go to Gaza and does what she needs to do. However, this is not before explaining her perspective on the seemingly endless conflict that has now come for her personally.

“You see, it’s just pure anti-Semitism,” Sheila explains in one of the show’s teachable moments. “I’m so sick of being grilled about my views on Palestine and my thoughts on Hamas, and being judged for things that are centuries old and that non-Jews know nothing about.

“Well, if they all think we should do something, then you better believe I’ll do something,” she concludes.

The episode ends with her in Israel — and she does attack. But it’s only verbal violence, as Sheila launches into a non-stop tirade-as-homage to Curb Your Enthusiasm and its pseudo-villain, Susie Greene (Susie Essman). Cue the trademark tuba, mandolin, banjo, and piano of “Frolic,” Curb theme song, as we reach what is said to be the halfway point of the 27th season of South Park.

The episode arrived a week later than planned, after the show’s creators admitted that they failed to complete it in time; Trey Parker and Matt Stone blamed their own procrastination habits for the delay. But some speculated the killing of Charlie Kirk, who was spoofed in episode two of season 27, at a speaking event in Utah that week, led to the new episode being yanked or possibly tweaked. The South Park team did manage to touch on the other major scandal of the moment with the Carr subplot, as it was his comments and veiled threats to ABC that are believed to have been the catalyst for Jimmy Kimmel’s late night show going dark last week.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Beetlejuice The Musical is coming to the West End
TV & Streaming

Beetlejuice The Musical is coming to the West End

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

It’s showtime! Beetlejuice The Musical is transferring to the West End stage after a smash-hit Broadway run.

The Tim Burton adaptation enjoyed three runs on the New York stage, plus an 88-city North American tour, and now is landing in London from May 2026.

The show will run at the Prince Edward Theatre featuring a Book by Scott Brown and Anthony King, Music and Lyrics by Eddie Perfect and direction from Tony Award winner Alex Timbers.

Much like the original 1988 film starring Winona Ryder and Catherine O’Hara, the musical follows “the tale of Lydia Deetz, a strange and unusual teenager sharing her home with a pair of newly-deads and the demonic ghost-with-the-most, Beetlejuice. He’s dead trouble, but if you really want to feel alive, just say his name three times”.

Beetlejuice The Musical.

Following the announcement, James Lane, Producer of Crossroads Live said: “The wait is over! We are beyond thrilled to be working alongside Warner Bros and the ingenious team behind Beetlejuice to bring this highly anticipated Broadway hit to London’s West End at last.

“There is nothing else quite like this show, and audiences really are in for a terrifyingly hilarious treat at the spectacular Prince Edward Theatre next year.”

Casting has yet to be announced, although the original Broadway stint had Alex Brightman in the role, which saw him earn a Tony nomination for best actor.

Tickets for the musical will go on sale from 30th October for now, check out the latest theatre shows at LOVETheatre.

Make sure you also check out the best pre-theatre dinner London, our guide to the best immersive dining London experiences, plus how to get cheap theatre tickets.

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Toni Collette, Mae Martin and Sarah Gadon
TV & Streaming

Is Evelyn Dead? Ending and Shocking ‘Leap’ Scene Explained by Toni Collette (Exclusive)

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84

Mae Martin‘s new Netflix series Wayward is a twisty psychological thriller about an academy for “troubled teens,” run by Evelyn Wade (Toni Collette), and the surrounding town that holds a whole lot of secrets.

Evelyn uses questionable methods to get the students to remember traumatic events from their past to prepare them for a ritual called “the Leap,” but the process is eventually turned on her in the end when Alex (Martin) injects her with a too-large portion of the drugs used, resulting in a haunting scene that shows Evelyn reacting to the psychedelic overload.

But did the injection actually kill her? “We actually did a lot of takes which were far more intense and it felt like Evelyn was gone forever,” Collette tells TV Insider. “But it’s kind of left a little open-ended.”

Martin, who created the show, confirms, “I think [Evelyn’s] still in there.”

Alex is a cop who’s new to the town of Tall Pines. He moved there with his pregnant wife, Laura (Sarah Gadon), who used to be a student at Tall Pines Academy and has a troubled history with Evelyn, memories of which she unlocks throughout the series. It doesn’t take long for Alex to notice that things are a little off at the Academy and within the town in general (for example, Tall Pines has no children.)

As he investigates, with help from two of the school’s teens, Abbie (Sydney Topliffe) and Leila (Alyvia Alyn Lind), he makes an enemy out of Evelyn, who wants to “Leap” him before he can find out the full truth of what she’s up to. When Alex escapes, he’s shocked to find that Laura has given birth to their child and is essentially sharing the baby with the rest of the people in the town. “It’s everyone’s. It’s the only way to break the pattern,” Laura insists.

While Alex seems horrified to see that his wife is essentially taking on Evelyn’s leadership role in a new form, he ultimately makes the decision to stay with her and their baby in Tall Pines. He helps Abbie escape by leaving her his car so she can leave town, but he doesn’t join her for the getaway.

“I knew that I wanted the show to escalate to something pretty surreal and almost sort of a parabole by the end, or a weird myth,” Martin explains. “Alex is a deeply flawed character who desperately wants acceptance, and I really understand his choice, in a way. He compromises a lot of his integrity and his morals, but he ultimately wants to stay with his wife and baby. I’m curious for what would happen for them in the future. I think their kid is going to be pretty messed up.”

As for whether or not we’ll get to explore the family’s future in another season of Wayward, that’s still up in the air. “I was told it was a miniseries, but there’s definitely more story to tell, I think,” Martin admits. “We left all those characters in crisis, basically.”

Collette adds that the cast “talks about” returning for a Season 2. “It’s endlessly intriguing,” she says. “Endlessly. So many places it could go, for sure.” As Gadon also points out, “Nothing’s tied up in a neat little bow.”

Wayward, All Episodes, Streaming now, Netflix

September 25, 2025 0 comments
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Apple Delay Really Doesn't Matter (Probably)
TV & Streaming

Apple Delay Really Doesn’t Matter (Probably)

by jummy84 September 25, 2025
written by jummy84


‘The Savant’: Apple Delay Really Doesn’t Matter (Probably)




























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Let’s Try To Be, Uh, Savant About This

Tuesday’s decision to postpone Jessica Chastain’s upcoming thriller — about an investigator who impersonates online extremists in order to prevent domestic terror attacks — has sparked backlash, even from the star herself. But there are more reasons to believe it’s a fair call than a foul one.

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September 25, 2025 0 comments
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