Rectify sounds great from looking it up. Why did I think it was an AMC show that got cancelled after two seasons?
The only consolation to that is that both Rectify and The Americans will get to end on their own terms instead of being prematurely canceled due to low ratings!
The Glanders
Philip and Elizabeth deal with the consequences of their actions while trying to complete a dangerous, new bio-weapons assignment.
- Flavorwire review:The Americans is TV's ultimate paean to commitment not the gooey American kind but a rather more Soviet version. This is the kind of commitment that doesn't wrap you in a warm Snuggie but binds you in chains. Philip and Elizabeth are united by necessity, and their primary loyalty is to their mother country, not to each other. (If that sounds severe, it is; this is among the most agonizing and, not incidentally, hottest romances on TV right now.) The Americans is truly till-death-do-us-part devoted to its concept and its characters, a quality that makes the series not just heartrending but ethical. It's never easy to decide just who is the hunter and who is the prey on this show. It explores the lives of its characters with enough depth for us to see that people can be victims and victimizers at the same time.
The nuclear family is often depicted on TV as the center of a small, self-contained world. But on The Americans, because this family is literally at the center of the Cold War, each of its moves has always carried the potential weight of world crisis, and the world now seems to be in particularly shaky hands. Weirdly, though, with bigger global threats introduced, the stakes for the family itself seem to be higher than ever. Its a result of and testament to how much the show makes us privilege our care for the Jenningses over our fears about the abstract threats they pose. Its also a result of the way actual history hovers over and shapes our understanding of the show.
- Inverse reviewIn today's campaign season marked not by facts but by fantasies, The Americans is a potent corrective. It's a series in which the emphasis on choices individual, irrevocable choices suggests a definition of "revolution" absent from the 2016 election's bombast. "To revolve" is to spin in a kind of infinite present; in The Americans, the next turn is the only one that matters. Asking and answering, "And then what happened?" with brusque assurance, the series emerges as a clear-eyed antidote to the central delusion of today: the pledge to resurrect the past in spite of its many shortcomings.
- Wired reviewThe fourth season of The Americans, though it does take bigger risks with believability and outlandish scenarios, has its main conflicts left to still resolve. Even as it integrates a couple of new plotlines which you may or may not feel at all invested in its intent on preserving the throughline of tension.
The Americans has only become more essential, and even more captivating, in its advancing age. By now, nearly every character is endangered, every relationship is suspect, and every escape route is blocked off. The joy of the early seasons were watching Elizabeth and Philip navigate an increasingly threatening world; now, the pleasure comes from seeing how theyll react when that world begins closing in on them.
Ha ha. I forgot about that.Looks good, but you forgot that Henry does a fine Eddie Murphy impression. You never know when that will come into play.
- Warming Glow reviewThe Americans became one of the best shows on television on the strength of a metaphor: Spying espionage, secrets, lies, loyalty, and betrayal as an alternate version of what its like for anyone to live in a family. Although were following the clandestine assignments of a pair of Russian spies living in the suburbs of Washington, D.C., during the Reagan era, the show achieves its best effects when it makes things personal small-scale and intimate.
The Americans is outstanding, and it continues to be excellent in season four. Its also somehow even darker and more suffocating.
There are fewer missions to track this year than last, at least to start a relief, perhaps, to fans who found season 3 to be too busy for its own good but this risky business is plenty engrossing.
Grade: A
Thanks!The trip to see Elizabeth's mother was to Germany, not Russia.
Does this link work for anyone? Im just getting the below error on the page:
This XML file does not appear to have any style information ..
Looked on the Washington Post site and could not find the recap video. If anyone has an alternative url for it or another site which shows a recap of season three I would be grateful
I've searched and can not find a decent one anywhere.
I'm assuming it'll still be in 1983 when S4 kicks off, but who knows? I believe perestroika is at least a couple years away at this point.What year are we at?
We should be nearing perestroika right.
Not working for me either. I can't find anything else about it.Does this link work for anyone? Im just getting the below error on the page:
This XML file does not appear to have any style information ..
Looked on the Washington Post site and could not find the recap video. If anyone has an alternative url for it or another site which shows a recap of season three I would be grateful
I've searched and can not find a decent one anywhere.
March 1983 as Reagan just gave the evil empire speech. Perestroika is 1985ish, iirc.What year are we at?
We should be nearing perestroika right.
Scroll to the bottom of the page and the same video is listed there.Does this link work for anyone? Im just getting the below error on the page:
This XML file does not appear to have any style information ..
Looked on the Washington Post site and could not find the recap video. If anyone has an alternative url for it or another site which shows a recap of season three I would be grateful
I've searched and can not find a decent one anywhere.
Thanks! Had an extra carriage return in there.Here:
https://videos.posttv.com/washpost-...5595-cf9g26_t_1457126613887_1280_720_2000.mp4
Removed the bad url formatting for you
- Esquire reviewThats the beautiful thing about The Americans; its exploration of identity and loyalty is unmatched, because of how it focuses on the human element so eloquently. Yes the spycraft can be fun and tense and exciting, but its the emotional conflicts that set the show a cut above. Season 4 is, so far, full of hard choices, carefully calibrated decision making, and the simple chaos of life that changes everything in an instant. There is also, of course, a knowing sense of dread that this life the Jennings have created false as it may have started, but real as it has become cannot last in this same way forever. There are forces marching against them at all times, but the shows greatest achievement is how deeply we care about that outcome.
- Huffington Post reviewThe Americans is an exceptional case in today's TV landscape: It is a show that demands your undivided attention. There's no checking your Twitter or Instagram feeds; the show shuts down all second screens. The Americans is about picking up clues, about the telling eyebrow raise, the ordinary-seeming coffee cup left by the bench, the car that turned left after signaling right. You have to watch so hard that you feel like you're spying on these Russian spieswhich, in a way, you are.
The spy part generates the show's adrenalin, and it doesn't abate in the opening episodes of Season 4.
It's the S2 premiere. No need to spoiler tag things that have already aired.Anyone know what season/episode is the one where they are at a fair and they walk in the room to find the family had been killed? Wanted to start watching again but couldn't remember if this was Season 2 or Season 3 and i remember that episode specifically even though i was 2-3 episodes after that but i figure ill just restart whatever season that was.
- MTV reviewThe Americans in my view is the best TV drama of this season. It excels to even greater degrees on levels large and small, with the intimate details of human interaction mixing with the humanity-at-stake, cloak and dagger goings-on that keep Philip and Elizabeth tenuously on point.
Grade: A
- New Republic reviewIts that mix of high-concept novelty and extreme domestic relatability that makes The Americans one of TVs best dramas.
- The Atlantic reviewWhile the show avoids sly winks to the future, the knowledge that the Jennings are fighting a losing battle lingers at the Cold War dramas edges. The action, even at its most thrilling, is tinged with futility. The shows stomach-clenching tension comes not from suspense but from an awareness of eventual doom.
The Americanss showrunner, Joe Weisberg, mines exquisite drama from the intricacies of each lie being told, as all of the shows alliances continue to teeter on the brink of disaster.
Such a great way to end the season. Very impactful, with Paige's confession to Pastor Tim intertwined with the Reagan speech.Almost time for Mail Robot's revenge. Watching the s3 finale for a refresher right now.
EDIT: Paige at the airport coming back from Germany, breaking down saying she doesn't know if she can do this. She's in such a shitty position for a kid to be in.
Damn, forgot that last shot of the season, Elizabeth in the foreground and Phillip in the background, and then the Jaws/Hitchcock zoom that pushes them farther apart.
Aw yeah, time for fucking spy shenanigans!
P.S. Woohoo, I made it!
Thanks dude, so far so good!Awwwwwwwwww yeaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaah. Hope everything has gone swimmingly for your new place.
Awesome let's do this!Aw yeah, time for fucking spy shenanigans!
P.S. Woohoo, I made it!
Still haven't forgiven Gabriel. Dude's a dick.