HBO Sundays back this weekend
Man DTF been holding you down this whole time
Man DTF been holding you down this whole time
true true. this thread gon be much more poppin tho
true true. this thread gon be much more poppin tho
Idk in think it’s gonna be messy
Man DTF been holding you down this whole time
this airing at the same time as DTF how
Should I finally start euphoria
levinson said “fezco is alive and is present in lots of scenes, and he feels angus would find his storyline funny if he was still alive” (marked as a spoiler jic some ppl don’t like wanna know)
but ngl that made me happy, glad they chose that direction instead of the other
somebody seriously needs to cast her in something
https://twitter.com/thursd6y/status/2041745260263436474It’s genuinely wild that she looks this good with no makeup on.
And yea I’m shocked she hasn’t landed more roles
somebody seriously needs to cast her in something
https://twitter.com/thursd6y/status/2041745260263436474This is what Odessa D'Zion or whatever the f*** is trying to be
Euphoria got hit with the Sam Levinson special damn
I think it was pretty expected that season 3 would end up with mixed reviews tbh.
It’s missing major cast members, it’s in a whole new setting, and Sam Levinson is just an inconsistent writer.
I’m still sure this will be a good time to watch though
So basically the show is still very entertaining, but disjointed. I think that was expected tbh
As a result, “Euphoria” is never not entertaining. Over the years, Levinson has proven capable of crafting an engaging spectacle in his sleep. (Even “The Idol,” his disastrous collaboration with The Weeknd, demanded attention, if not approval.) There’s just a disjointedness to the various elements of Season 3 that this new incarnation of “Euphoria” has yet to overcome. The Western landscapes that form Levinson’s latest visual obsession are a feast for the eyes, but the new genre doesn’t feel any more connected to a suburban coming-of-age story than the characters’ new pursuits.
What few attempts at cohesion do exist only emphasize how much “Euphoria” has outgrown, or outlasted, its origins. Lexi now works in a Hollywood writers’ room, which tracks with her past as a playwright; Maddy working as a talent manager to the star of Lexi’s show comes off more convenient than convincing. At least Cassie and Nate’s doomed-seeming union, if not her new side hustle, feels like an extension of the original mission — they’re becoming their parents, as underscored by affecting, sometimes hilarious turns by Dane and Alanna Ubach as Cassie and Lexi’s mother. Everywhere else, it’s hard to shake the sense that “Euphoria” has become fanfiction of itself, or perhaps a Trojan horse for a scattered slew of ideas Levinson has shoehorned into his current platform. When I pressed play on the Season 3 premiere, I was eager to learn what kind of show “Euphoria” is now. Close to its halfway point, I still don’t really know.