
The Best TV Shows of 2025, So Far
The first half of 2025 saw the return of strike-delayed hit shows, like 'Severance,' 'The White Lotus' and 'The Last of Us,' that took turns dominating the cultural conversation. But only one of them made our top TV list.
Read on to find out which one and to see which other series, new and old, scripted and nonfiction, impressed our television critics the most (listed alphabetically).
'Andor'
A prequel series to 'Rogue One: A Star Wars Story' (2016) — and arguably the most acclaimed 'Star Wars' story of any kind since that film — 'Andor' offered one of TV's deepest explorations of the political realities and human costs of rebellion. Its two-season run wrapped up in May.
'Prequels are often where dramatic tension goes to die,' James Poniewozik writes. 'How invested can you be in a story whose outcome you already know? The genius of 'Andor,' created by Tony Gilroy, is to make that knowledge an asset.'
'Asura'
Written and directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda ('Shoplifters'), this Japanese period drama is visually sumptuous and emotionally meticulous in its depiction of four sisters grappling with controlling men and their complex relationships with one another.
The series 'is the full package: a detailed, human-scale domestic drama with plenty to say, fascinating characters to say it and the stylishness to make it sing,' Margaret Lyons writes. 'The downside is that other shows feel paltry and thin in comparison. The upside is everything else.'
'Exterior Night'
The first television series by great Italian filmmaker Marco Bellocchio, 'Exterior Night,' revisits the 1978 kidnapping and killing of politician Aldo Moro by the Red Brigades. (Bellocchio explored those events previously in his 2003 film 'Good Morning, Night.')
'Moro's abduction and death was a watershed moment in the 'years of lead,' when politically motivated bombings, shootings, kidnappings and assassinations convulsed Italy and other European countries,' Mike Hale writes. 'But it is a story that can speak to anyone who has a sense of living in perilous times. As a character in 'Exterior Night' says, a society can tolerate a certain amount of crazy behavior, but 'when the crazy party has the majority, we'll see what happens.''
'Murderbot'
In this comic sci-fi thriller, based on the novel 'All Systems Red' by Martha Wells, Alexander Skarsgard plays a jaded robot that is charged with protecting a crunchy space commune but would rather just watch pulpy soaps.
'The real killer app of the story, adapted by Chris and Paul Weitz, is the snarky worldview of the artificial life form at its center,' Poniewozik writes. 'Skarsgard gives a lively reading to the copious voice-over, but just as important is his physical performance, which radiates casual power and agitated wariness. Murderbot is odd, edgy, unmistakably alien, yet its complaint is also crankily familiar. It just wants to be left in peace to binge its programs, like Chance the Gardener if he had guns in his arms.'
'The Pitt'
With its '24'-like hour-by-hour structure, 'The Pitt' infuses the familiar pleasures of a medical show with fevered intensity and narrative references to the pandemic and contemporary social issues.
''The Pitt' generated old-school melodrama out of a simple understanding: The E.R. is where people end up when something goes wrong, either with the body individual or with the body politic,' Poniewozik writes. 'And what is wrong with the American corpus? Buddy, take a number; the waiting room is full.'
'Severance'
In its second season, this trippy workplace drama deepens its mysteries and expands its emotional palette as the mentally 'severed' employees, their loved ones and their bosses battle (sometimes literally) over competing agendas and the future of Lumon Industries. The show finally returned in January, nearly three years after the end of Season 1.
'Its makers seem to have used every second of the absence productively,' Poniewozik writes. 'The season takes new turns while remaining the most ambitious, batty and all-out pleasurable show on TV, an M.C. Escher maze whose plot convolutions never get in the way of its voice, heart and sense of humor.' —NYT
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Observer
10 hours ago
- Observer
The Best TV Shows of 2025, So Far
The first half of 2025 saw the return of strike-delayed hit shows, like 'Severance,' 'The White Lotus' and 'The Last of Us,' that took turns dominating the cultural conversation. But only one of them made our top TV list. Read on to find out which one and to see which other series, new and old, scripted and nonfiction, impressed our television critics the most (listed alphabetically). 'Andor' A prequel series to 'Rogue One: A Star Wars Story' (2016) — and arguably the most acclaimed 'Star Wars' story of any kind since that film — 'Andor' offered one of TV's deepest explorations of the political realities and human costs of rebellion. Its two-season run wrapped up in May. 'Prequels are often where dramatic tension goes to die,' James Poniewozik writes. 'How invested can you be in a story whose outcome you already know? The genius of 'Andor,' created by Tony Gilroy, is to make that knowledge an asset.' 'Asura' Written and directed by Hirokazu Kore-eda ('Shoplifters'), this Japanese period drama is visually sumptuous and emotionally meticulous in its depiction of four sisters grappling with controlling men and their complex relationships with one another. The series 'is the full package: a detailed, human-scale domestic drama with plenty to say, fascinating characters to say it and the stylishness to make it sing,' Margaret Lyons writes. 'The downside is that other shows feel paltry and thin in comparison. The upside is everything else.' 'Exterior Night' The first television series by great Italian filmmaker Marco Bellocchio, 'Exterior Night,' revisits the 1978 kidnapping and killing of politician Aldo Moro by the Red Brigades. (Bellocchio explored those events previously in his 2003 film 'Good Morning, Night.') 'Moro's abduction and death was a watershed moment in the 'years of lead,' when politically motivated bombings, shootings, kidnappings and assassinations convulsed Italy and other European countries,' Mike Hale writes. 'But it is a story that can speak to anyone who has a sense of living in perilous times. As a character in 'Exterior Night' says, a society can tolerate a certain amount of crazy behavior, but 'when the crazy party has the majority, we'll see what happens.'' 'Murderbot' In this comic sci-fi thriller, based on the novel 'All Systems Red' by Martha Wells, Alexander Skarsgard plays a jaded robot that is charged with protecting a crunchy space commune but would rather just watch pulpy soaps. 'The real killer app of the story, adapted by Chris and Paul Weitz, is the snarky worldview of the artificial life form at its center,' Poniewozik writes. 'Skarsgard gives a lively reading to the copious voice-over, but just as important is his physical performance, which radiates casual power and agitated wariness. Murderbot is odd, edgy, unmistakably alien, yet its complaint is also crankily familiar. It just wants to be left in peace to binge its programs, like Chance the Gardener if he had guns in his arms.' 'The Pitt' With its '24'-like hour-by-hour structure, 'The Pitt' infuses the familiar pleasures of a medical show with fevered intensity and narrative references to the pandemic and contemporary social issues. ''The Pitt' generated old-school melodrama out of a simple understanding: The E.R. is where people end up when something goes wrong, either with the body individual or with the body politic,' Poniewozik writes. 'And what is wrong with the American corpus? Buddy, take a number; the waiting room is full.' 'Severance' In its second season, this trippy workplace drama deepens its mysteries and expands its emotional palette as the mentally 'severed' employees, their loved ones and their bosses battle (sometimes literally) over competing agendas and the future of Lumon Industries. The show finally returned in January, nearly three years after the end of Season 1. 'Its makers seem to have used every second of the absence productively,' Poniewozik writes. 'The season takes new turns while remaining the most ambitious, batty and all-out pleasurable show on TV, an M.C. Escher maze whose plot convolutions never get in the way of its voice, heart and sense of humor.' —NYT


Muscat Daily
14-05-2025
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HBO Max is back: Warner Bros. Discovery to revert streaming service name
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Observer
26-04-2025
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Ralph Lauren Introduces the Big Pants Index
President Donald Trump is not the only one with the last Gilded Age on his mind. On Thursday, Ralph Lauren held his fall 2025 fashion show in the bank hall of the Clock Tower Building in lower Manhattan, an Italian Renaissance revival edifice that opened in 1898 as the home of New York Life Insurance Co., complete with marble Corinthian columns, a 29-foot coffered ceiling, an ornate staircase and its own vault. The setting was a departure from Lauren's recent trend of re-creating his own environments as the backdrops of his collections: He has brought guests out to Ralph Hampton, his fantasy of Long Island; opened up his Madison Avenue headquarters; and re-created his Colorado ranch at the Brooklyn Navy Yard. But given the tenor of the time, his latest show venue felt pretty apropos. Actor Anne Hathaway was there, in a beige trenchcoat and bedazzled beige denim. So were singer Kacey Musgraves, in a white tank top and cowboy hat; actor Ariana DeBose, in pinstripes; and 'The White Lotus' ingenue Sarah Catherine Hook, in a necktie. What was not there, however: corsets. Or bustles. (That was good news.) Instead, Lauren offered a parade of pants — and not just any old pants, but big pants. Pants that were almost always pleated and that billowed around the legs. Pants in leather and wool. Pants that were almost ... pantaloons, which sometimes were tucked into knee-high boots so they puffed out around the thighs and sometimes truncated into knickerbockers so they only looked like they were tucked into the boots. With the pants he showed a lot of lacy jabots and ruffled white shirts, frothing at the neck. Also beat-up leathers and the occasional slinky backless halter dress, almost always complete with its own jabot. Everything was in black and white or camel and brown, with the occasional flash of amethyst glittering in the light. Lauren called the show 'The Modern Romantics.' But its references seemed to be his own work from around the last turn of the century (especially the go-go Wall Street era when he built his empire) with, perhaps, a nod to the 'dandy' theme of the upcoming Met Gala, that celebration of fashion and financial excess, mixed in. And all of it was made more interesting by the tensions — between masculine and feminine, hard and soft — running like threads through the looks. The effect was less escapist than is often the case with Lauren's cinematic productions and more pointed. It seemed to say, forget the hemline index — that folky 'economic indicator' suggesting that skirts go up when things are good and come down when things turn bad — and instead consider the big pants gauge: the idea that when things get unpredictable, when you feel like you are teetering on the edge of the volcano, a lot of material around the legs may be exactly what everyone wants to wear. Well, it is a form of protective covering. Why not also a bellwether? At the end of the show, Lauren materialized on the grand hall's mezzanine, wearing a black longhorn sweater. Julia Louis-Dreyfus, who was sitting next to Lauren's wife, Ricky, craned her neck upward and snapped photos on her smartphone as her fellow guests applauded and Lauren waved to the audience spread out below — lord, for the moment, of all he surveyed. —NYT