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Fargo Season 5 Episode 1: A Deliberate Coen Brothers Homage

Here's what it was like to depict 2019 through the Fargo lens, according to Noah Hawley, Juno Temple, and Jennifer Jason Leigh. Fargo Year 5 Creator and Cast on Episode 1’s Deliberate Coen Brothers Homage Liz Shannon Miller

Fargo Season 5 Episode 1: A Deliberate Coen Brothers Homage

Here's what it was like to depict 2019 through the Fargo lens, according to Noah Hawley, Juno Temple, and Jennifer Jason Leigh. Fargo Year 5 Creator and Cast on Episode 1’s Deliberate Coen Brothers Homage Liz Shannon Miller

Ted Lasso Season 3 Sets Up An Intriguing (Final?) Chapter: Review

The return of Apple TV+'s Ted Lasso brings some exciting new characters and storylines to its reliable formula. Ted Lasso Season 3 Sets Up An Intriguing (Final?) Chapter: Review Paolo Ragusa

Fargo Season 5: Juno Temple, Jon Hamm, and Jennifer Jason Leigh Join Cast

Juno Temple, Jon Hamm, and Jennifer Jason Leigh are set to star in Season 5 of Fargo, Deadline reports. The next installment of Noah Hawley‘s anthology will be the FX series’ most contemporary yet, set in 2019. While not much is known about the plot of Season 5, Temple, Ham, and Leigh will play Dot, Roy, and Lorraine, respectively. According to Deadline, the season deals with kidnapping — or, at least, what appears to be a kidnapping. Hawley and Warren Littlefield return as executive producers, as do the Coen Brothers. Fargo tends to alternate between retro and modern settings. Season 1 of the crime drama, which starred Billy Bob Thornton, Allison Tolman, Colin Hanks, and Martin Freeman, took place in 2006, while Kirsten Dunst, Patrick Wilson, Jesse Plemons,&n...

The Offer Spins a Fable Out of the Making of The Godfather: Review

The Pitch: In the early 1970s, a plucky little movie studio called Paramount Pictures, overseen by a firebrand named Bob Evans (Matthew Goode), had the rights to make a movie based on a very popular novel called The Godfather. Making this movie, of course, would be no small task, and the hero of the project became an unlikely one: Alfred S. Ruddy (Miles Teller), who prior to taking on the project was a relatively inexperienced film producer best known for co-creating the classic ’60s sitcom Hogan’s Heroes (prior to which he worked for the Rand Corporation as a programmer). Ruddy’s problems aren’t just limited to negotiating the wild personalities involved with the film — Evans himself, neurotic director Francis Ford Coppola (Dan Fogler), a fresh-faced theater actor named Al Pacino (Anthony...