Bean manages a very sophisticated, little social satire.
All in Action
Bean manages a very sophisticated, little social satire.
Marguerite Bennett delivers one of the single best scripts she rendered for the series thus far.
It all hits the page quite dynamically.
Mora and Spicer have a hell of a lot of work to do with Kirkman’s script.
A firm rooting in a very deep emotional reality that feels quite refreshing.
Takara’s mastery of dramatic subtlety looks particularly brilliant.
Allen establishes a solidly interesting conflict for Dani.
Remender managers a very dark portion of his narrative with a relatively deft hand.
Pires has a lot of backstory to cover.
Kirkman has a solid handle on the scripting.
There is some degree of poetry in Snyder‘s script.
Wijngaard slams some very, very powerful moments into the page with some pretty overwhelming power.
It's both silly and absurd, while also being very appealing as an action horror concept.
It’s quite engaging.
There is a considerable amount of poetry in the fantasy that Barbiere is binding to the page.
Remender he is working with an old war thriller cliché.
Smith does a strikingly good job of framing a fantasy story.
The plot is appealingly irreverent.
Tynion and Bellaire keep the plot, moving in a couple of really tightly written scenes.
There isn’t a whole lot going on here, but that doesn’t mean that it isn’t fun.