best of 2024

Vulture’s 25 Most Popular TV Recaps of 2024

The shows (and comment sections) our readers couldn’t get enough of.

Photo-Illustration: Mia Angioy. Source: Prime Video, HBO, Simon Ridgway, Netflix, FX
Photo-Illustration: Mia Angioy. Source: Prime Video, HBO, Simon Ridgway, Netflix, FX

What makes a good recap show? That’s something we here at Vulture probably spend more time thinking about than anyone else does or should, but after nearly two decades in the recap biz and many shifts in the TV viewing landscape, we’ve gathered enough data to have a pretty good handle on the answer. As evidenced by our annual roundups of the site’s most popular recaps, readers still flock to shows that release on a weekly cadence rather than as binge releases — although there are always some notable counterexamples, most of them dropped by the big red “N.†That held true in 2024 as well, with both network and streaming shows that released one or two episodes a week composing the majority of our top 25. Returning shows, with their already-developed fan bases, tend to float to the top of the list as well — but once again, there are always outliers, with this year’s top ten featuring two brand-new shows (one of them a binge drop!) that became immediate viewer obsessions, with active comments sections to match.

This is the strange alchemy of recaps, one of the last remaining bastions of watercooler TV in the post-Twitter age: You never know when a show is going to defy the established patterns and break out on the strength of its own distinct qualities. Every year provides a mix of comforting familiarity and surprising variety, on television broadly as well as in the Vulture recaps section specifically. So here is this year’s mix, in celebration of the recap writers and commenters who are committed to continuing the conversation after the credits roll.

25. The Perfect Couple

Photo: Seacia Pavao/Netflix

 Season 1, Episode 1: You want to know the exact moment I knew The Perfect Couple was right for me? That we were in for a sudsy beach read in TV form? It was the moment I saw those opening credits. A choreographed group dance number to Meghan Trainor’s “Criminals� When you get Nicole Kidman and Liev Schrieber to gleefully perform a line dance for a show about secrets and murder, well, we’ve won, okay? Yeah, Nicole Kidman might be the “we come to this place for magic†lady, but she is also a fucking Academy Award winner; the woman commits, and it’s clear she is committing to this vibe. A vibe that says we are here to entertain. A vibe that says, “Yes, someone is dead and everyone is a suspect, but we are having fun.†And if that’s not your particular vibe, not to be mean, but you should get off this ride. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

tnoumong
September 7, 2024 at 5:49 AM
Like summer beach read, this show isn't made to be after awards and accolades. It's made for a viciously fun watch. Certainly I was entertained. The casting of Isabelle Adjani is chef-kiss. Surprise to see her in an American production but she's very good (I always enjoy her comedic chops.) Dakota Fanning is perfect in that mean girl spirit. Nicole Kidman seems to be enjoying her life with these kinds of roles now which is nice to see.

24. The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power

Photo: Ben Rothstein / Prime Video

Season 2, Episode 8: Inside Celebrimbor’s workshop, Sauron has decided to use the smith for target practice. Sauron promises his captive a swift death in return for information about the rings, but that’s not an appealing enough offer for Celebrimbor, who tells Sauron that he’ll never get the rings and that he should consider pounding sand (but in much more flowery terms). Then he goads Sauron into killing him with a string of insults he concludes by saying the rings will be Sauron’s ruin and mockingly calling him the “Lord of the Rings.†(That’s a catchy title. Someone should use it.) When the orcs arrive, he’s crying, though it’s not clear whether Celebrimbor’s insults hit home or if he genuinely feels bad about killing him. He quickly puts emotions aside, however, and sets about charming the orcs he wants to bring to his side. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

jm_la
October 3, 2024 at 11:22 PM
To the tune of "Alejandro" by Lady Gaga:

Don't forge the rings, don't forge the rings
Celebrimbor
Don't be his bitch (be Sauron's bitch)
Celebrimbor
You betrayed your race, and middle earth
Now everything's gone to shit
Don't forge the rings, don't forge the rings
Celebrimbor

Celebrimbor, Celebrimbor
Cele-Cele-Celebrimbor
Cele-Cele-Celebrimbor
Celebrimbor, Celebrimbor

23. RuPaul’s Drag Race

Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: MTV

Season 16, Episode 16: I suppose I should talk about Plane’s episode as well. I’ll say this: She’s extremely talented, she was the main character of the season, and she did a great job performing her number. “Bodysuit†is funny and silly and entertaining all the way through. Her facial expressions in that number, along with how well she hid the reveal, show her to be a world-class queen. Still, no part of me was surprised when she got cut. In the performance, there was a strand of hair getting in her face that was a persistent issue (that kind of detail matters in the finale), but most damning was her inability to take the interview portion seriously. She never fully let her guard down and got serious. Is that a requirement for a good drag queen? Maybe not, but it is a requirement on Drag Race. Taken in combination with her interview from last week, it’s no surprise that she was not Drag Race’s version of America’s Next Drag Superstar. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

bosman
April 20, 2024 at 2:53 AM
Hmmm I don't think making cutting comments about other queens equals charisma. A lesson Plan needs to learn. Nymphia, in my opinion, has plenty. Also, she ate that final lip synch. Sapphira, who I expected to win, was a bystander.

22. Yellowstone

Photo: Emerson Miller/Paramount Global, 2024

Season 5, Episode 14: The best thing that I can say about the series (?) finale of Yellowstone is that it’s bad in a comfortable, predictable way, rather than bad in a way that makes you feel like you’re going insane. Sure, there’s one last bit of Taylor Sheridan self-gratification in the first ten minutes, as everyone gathers around and laughs heartily at one last wacky story from Travis. But there’s nothing as brain-breaking as last week’s extended Travis segment. Then again … you ideally want to feel something when you’re watching the (most likely) last episode of a show, don’t you? Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

auricjuice
December 16, 2024 at 9:09 PM
Thank goodness this nightmare is over.

I really wish Taylor Sheridan the worst.

Thank you for recapping, it's the absolute highlight of anything to do with this show.

21. The Bachelor

Photo: ABC

Season 28, Episode 11: It has been a minute since I’ve had to watch the bizarre ritual of a Live Most Dramatic Ever Bachelor Finale. I forgot about all the longing looks off balconies in Tulum. I forgot about all the moments where the ladytestants hold their dresses up to their face like they’re doing the most busted color analysis in the world. Am I a Winter? Or a Bright Spring? Or a Neutral Jovani? I forgot about the moment when one ladytestant produces her own Bachelorette audition tape and completely hijacks the most unabashedly romantic proposal we’ve seen in years. Wait … that last one doesn’t sound right. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

squirrell
March 26, 2024 at 6:18 PM
who knew "the most shocking season finale ever with twists you'll never see coming!!!!" would mean that three (seemingly) emotionally mature adults acted with agency and decisiveness while treating eachother with genuine respect :-O
Honestly, of all the things it could have been- I never saw that one coming

20. Dark Matter

Photo: Apple TV+

Season 1, Episode 8: I’m deducting one full star for the absence of a cold open in an episode that clearly demands one, but otherwise this installment is pretty damn good, delivering fully on the premise the prior episode’s concluding scene teased: The conflict is no longer Jason A — or Jason One, as one of them refers to, uh, themselves in this episode — vs. Jason B. It’s a whole bunch of Jasons A (a flock of Jasons? A school of Jasons? A murder of Jasons?) who have branched off from the one Jason B abducted and exiled to a foreign universe about a month ago in story-time, versus the one Jason B. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

psmoynihan
June 19, 2024 at 2:20 PM
This show is getting fun. Maybe we can get a season two from Daniela A's perspective!

19. Survivor

Photo: Robert Voets/CBS

Season 47, Episode 4: Another episode and another 90 minutes dealing with an annoying, unnecessary, and frustrating preoccupation. No, I’m not talking about idol hunting; I’m talking about whatever the hell is going on with Rome, the sort of terrible player who is emboldened by the new era. But before we get to him, let’s talk about idol hunting. At the start of the episode, Gabe is talking about how he wants to work with someone just like Sue, an older woman and a mother. We see her lie about her age, saying she’s 45 rather than 58. They know she’s a grandmother, I’m just not sure how that math is mathing or that biology is biology-ing, but they seem to have bought it. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

triplej.ferro
October 10, 2024 at 11:18 AM
I don't know how Sol managed not to beat the crap out of Rome. And I don't know in what world Sue thinks she could pass for 45. This season there's at least one person on each tribe who would drive me batsh*t crazy if I had to be stuck with them.

18. Presumed Innocent

Photo: Apple TV+

Season 1, Episode 8: A courtroom drama operates somewhat like a sports match: The defense and prosecution teams are looking to score points against each other. Even Tommy puts it in those terms. “He beat me,†he tells Nico as his friend urges him to move on from this one defeat. However, there is another, higher level of competition in the legal-thriller industry. The story’s actors, writers, producers, and directors aim to outscore the audience, our theories and instincts. And regardless of how artfully it was done, I will say this: They got me. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

kheh
July 24, 2024 at 6:18 PM
I found it so weird that Carolyn wanted nothing to do with the son she already had, even when he was little, yet she was going to keep Rusty's baby. That would have been enough to drive her son into a murderous rage.

17. 3 Body Problem

Photo: Netflix

Season 1, Episode 1: The stakes still aren’t totally defined by the end of this pilot: We’re starting to get to know these people and what they’re dealing with, but the whole web of mysteries is so amorphous and free-floating at this stage that the show hasn’t quite achieved a sense of real momentum yet. But there’s more than enough to enjoy here if you can swallow the physics babble and just roll with the trippy sci-fi horror grounded by an unusual historical angle. If this show ends up prioritizing existential thrills over visceral action, that’s fine by me. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

snakeoil
March 21, 2024 at 11:43 AM
Really interesting story so far, excited to watch more! I don’t get how one of the Oxford five, Apparently the most brilliant woman in world, have time to style herself like a Kardashian, while simultaniously being haunted by a countdown clock. Odd choice. But hey, That might be why she can split nanostuff, and I can’t.

16. The Real Housewives of New Jersey

Photo: Bravo

Season 14, Episode 13: This is the way the show ends, not with a bang but with a whimper. That whimper was Jackie Goldschneider as she tottered to her car, waiting to turn a corner because the opposite side of the epic battle of New Jersey was waiting around the corner and would curse her out for her behavior. Yes, this is the epic finale that has been hyped since the first trailer dropped for the season, but it didn’t seem epic. It seemed … the same. The same grinding of gears, the same talking in circles, the same hatred from the same people in the same direction. I mean, it was great reality television, but it is absolutely the end of the road for these women. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

lh29
August 5, 2024 at 3:07 AM
Bravo, just try it without Teresa. Please. You can always bring her back if you really feel you need to but please, just see what this show could be like without that mind-numbingly stupid woman. She is devoid of humor, charm, taste, reasoning or intellect. We can’t do it anymore.

15. Summer House

Photo: Bravo

Season 8, Episode 15: This conclusion was amazing because it wasn’t about the bust-up, it wasn’t about what we knew was going to happen, it was about some deeper miracle that motivated the women in this house to unite. This is about acceptance, this is about being a family, this is about loving someone in distress more than hating them for petty reasons. It also made me a little bit pissed that the cameras didn’t follow the whole crew to Mexico for what should have been Lindsay’s wedding trip. I wanted them to go full Sex and the City with Ciara sleeping with a bellhop and Gabby shitting her bathing suit because she wouldn’t drink the Mexican water or whatever nonsense Charlotte got up to. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

keeplaughing
May 31, 2024 at 4:01 AM
Congratulations, Lindsay! You are rid of the biggest, whiniest man-baby on the planet. Hope the manipulative jerk can find the soft and tender Sugar Mama/Daddy/Couple that his gooey, marshmallow interior craves; someone to stroke his hair, call him a good and gifted boy, and put gold stars on his chart. I just don't want to see it. He makes me sick.

14. The Boys

Photo: Prime Video

Season 4, Episode 8: So a messy but compelling season ends with a vision of America that is not so different from what was recently outlined in Project 2025. At this point in the show, the satire might not have the same punch as it did in the first couple of seasons, but even now, The Boys’s idea of dystopia still feels painfully familiar. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

alien_jesus
July 19, 2024 at 2:28 AM
Look, the finale worked for me. A couple of times I was totally taken by surprise. It was brutal and still pretty damn compelling.

Look, any return of Love Sausage, even if we were only treated to a few feet, is a big win.

➼ Bonus recap! Don’t miss Keith Phipps’s weekly ranking of The Boys’s grossest behavior.

13. Love Is Blind

Photo: Courtesy of Netflix

Season 6, Week 2 (episodes 7–9): Since day one, Laura has emphasized how important cleanliness is to her. But since Jeramey’s place — complete with a “More espresso, less depresso†sign — is so organized that it’s “giving serial-killer vibes,†she’s got room to focus on a different issue. Namely, Sarah Ann, who DM’d Jeramey to say she’d love to meet him “if there’s ever a chance†his mind is “shifting†in his choice. Bold! Laura isn’t happy that he double-tapped the message to like it. She brings this up when her family visits, but they actually are mostly on Jeramey’s side. In general, they just seem relieved that he can put up with Laura’s … unique personality. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

mustard-flowers
February 22, 2024 at 2:53 PM
I'd bet my last dollar that Jeramy left his phone in the car when he shared his location but forgot about his Apple Watch when he was caught in that lie!

12. The Real Housewives of Orange County

Photo: Bravo

Season 18, Episode 1: God bless Shannon Beador. She has never had a good season on this show. Not even once. She’s either getting thrown out of Heather Dubrow’s house, getting cheated on, seeing a trainer who says “Wow†when he weighs her, having David break up with her again, alienating and realienating everyone around her. Yet she comes back. Although all common decency tells her not to, she returns, like the swallows at Capistrano or a herpes infection. Shannon always comes back. We thank her for her service and hope she never smartens up. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

makaleen
July 12, 2024 at 1:35 PM
John Jansen is a geriatric Slade Smiley.

11. The Real Housewives of Salt Lake City

Photo: Bravo

Season 4, Episode 16: These are the awards Heather Gay should receive not only for her meticulous investigation but for crafting an iconic reveal: an Honorary Primetime Emmy Award, a Peabody, the J.D. Power & Associates Award, the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor, a CFDA Award, Elle’s Women in Hollywood Icon Award, and the Nobel Peace Prize. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

fka_mc0325
January 3, 2024 at 4:19 AM
Tenecia may be the actual villain because she’s been doing Heathers hair while siphoning info for her blog for the last 3 years while Heather’s hair has been horrific for the last 3 years. She’s to blame for those weaves all this time. Jail, straight to jail.

10. The Real Housewives of Beverly Hills

Photo: Bravo

Season 13, Episode 10: Now, onto our final convo, and boy, is it a doozy. Yes, it’s Garcelle and Dorit’s sit-down about race. First, let us say that it is a chic-off between these two. Dorit is giving me classic Yale prep with a sweater over a colored shirt, and Garcelle is giving me a winter-white editor’s cape over a chic black-and-white-patterned top. If you’re going to have an awkward conversation, you might as well look amazing doing it. And boy, does it start off awkward. It wasn’t just crickets between these two; it was a plague of locusts. You could cut the tension with a Hermès place setting. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

hmmmm
January 4, 2024 at 5:42 PM
I can accept that Dorit was unaware (because it is of no great concern to her) that using the word “attack†is triggering to Garcelle and a micro aggression. BUT when a person of color points that out, the only response is - I am truly sorry, I should have understood that but I did not and I really appreciate your willingness to be honest with me. I will do better. Full stop. When someone tells you that your behavior makes them feel less then - stop that behavior. This season, Dorit and PK are having marital issues because PK is marginalizing her trauma from the break in. But here she is marginalizing Garcelle’s feelings of being triggered by Dorit’s behavior. The fact that she can’t see the irony is another BIG example of being a Karen.

9. Industry

Photo: Simon Ridgway

Season 3, Episode 8: “Money tames the beast. Money is peace. Money is civilization. The end of the story is money.†So says Eric, quoting a Denis Johnson story called “The Largesse of the Sea Maiden.†… It’s a moment where I think we’re watching Eric talk to the traders, sure, but mostly, he’s talking to himself. Here is a man trying to steel himself after a midlife crisis, after the institution he has dedicated his entire working life to nearly crumbled. Ken Leung is stunning in this scene, delivering lines that I philosophically might disagree with in a way that makes one want to nod along and say, “Amen.†And the traders agree. Eric’s speech gets everyone through troubled waters. They live to see another day, even as Eric looks stunned and a little bewildered in the empty amphitheater after the speech is over. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

kirker
September 30, 2024 at 2:47 AM
I did not have "Yasmin finally screws Rob after four years of foreplay before getting engaged to Henry 45 minutes later" on my bingo card this week. (Or scratch-off.)

8. Fallout

Photo: JoJo Whilden/Prime Video

Season 1, Episode 1: The episode leaves the best until last. It’s the Ghoul, baby! That’s a rotting Walton Goggins (Ghoulgins, heh) in a cowboy hat, minus a nose, with a fierce trigger finger and Eastwoodian proclivity for scowling. Buried alive by some Big Cheese he’d pissed off, he’s pulled out of the mud by a trio of bounty hunters who seek his services in tracking down the aforementioned Enclave runaway, who has a retirement-level bounty on his head. He chews the scenery for a bit and blows a guy’s head off — it’s an instant win. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

auburnalum01
April 14, 2024 at 7:56 PM
I have never played the games but came across the trailer and thought the show looked interesting. I really enjoyed parts of the first episode. The first 10 minutes are some of the best television I've seen all year. I also really enjoyed the parts with Lucy's character. It's when the show moves on the Brotherhood that I didn't care as much. I'm going to keep watching, but the more we spend with Lucy and Walton Goggins the better.

7. Vanderpump Rules

Season 11, Episode 15: The real dialectic here is that Ariana only considers her real life and Sandoval only considers the show. I think that, for these reality-television professionals, the only way forward is somewhere in between all real-life boundaries and all show theatrics. It’s not leaving everything on-camera, like Lala says; it’s not doing everything that’s good for your life, like Katie says. It’s a balance. It’s in between. But that is an ideal world in which everyone thinks these things out in advance and plans them. Reality TV is much messier — it’s people trying to live through the worst moments of their lives in public as we watch and judge them for it. It’s real-time reactions to real-life problems that we then sit around and consider as if they happen in an ideal world cut off from emotion. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

morallycorrupt
May 8, 2024 at 4:20 AM
The producers have been so manipulative this season, it's almost like they've been taking lessons from Sandoval. Him accusing Ariana, who came in 3rd on DWTS and sold out on Broadway, of being lazy and not doing anything this season was gross. He has no respect for her, and his whole 'nice to meet you man' dance with Dan was clearly all for show. Ariana has been honest this season, and I would watch her over his performative, toxic bs any day. Ariana has empowered women in major ways - last week's recap was all about the insidious nature of misogyny and that is because of Ariana. From where I'm sitting, she did more to earn her paycheck than Sandoval. He gave a bad performance for 15 episodes, and that's true laziness imo.

It took a lot of courage to refuse to be a cog in the Sandoval redemption arc machine. Bravo is clearly pissed, but viewers appreciate the authenticity. Sorry Andy. We're over male rage. But we're here for female empowerment and self-respect.

6. Saturday Night Live

Photo: Will Heath/NBC

Season 50, Episode 2: Bargatze has quickly returned as a conquering hero. If he was at all surprised this time around that a single prior appearance may have vaulted him to the John Mulaney–level of hosting once a season even if he doesn’t necessarily have anything to plug, well, it certainly didn’t seem that way. Then again, one of Bargatze’s greatest assets is that it’s hard to tell what’s going on beneath that impenetrable veneer. Seldom has a comedian’s affect seemed so directly in conflict with the thrust of their material. Is he nervous? Amused with himself? Having the time of his life? Who’s to say. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

veronicasawyer
October 6, 2024 at 6:41 PM
Um... I thought Jane Wickline's Update desk was inscrutable and her line readings in the water park sketch were truly amateurish in the worst possible way. So, I fail to understand the logic in dumping Molly Kearney and Chloe Troast (2 skilled, yet underutilized performers) and adding Wickline. Unless it's solely about Lorne trying to court Gen Z by hiring barely famous tik tok content creators. Oh, wait. I understand now.

5. Bridgerton

Photo: LIAM DANIEL/NETFLIX

Season 3, Episode 8: Then, Penelope attends Francesca and John’s sweet little wedding ceremony in the Bridgerton drawing room. This means that not only is she privy to the toast of the century — seriously, where does John Stirling, president of the Wainscoting Fan Club, get off making us all weep with his lovely words about Violet Bridgerton? How dare you, sir — but she is once again reminded of how lovely the Bridgerton family is. They have been so warm and welcoming to her for so many years, and she is about to fuck their shit up big time. She just can’t do it. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

holbee
June 14, 2024 at 8:00 AM
Why would Daphne miss both her siblings' weddings and no one even mentioned it??

4. The Bear

Photo: FX

Season 3, Episode 1: Carmy’s whole culinary career has gotten him to where we find him now, unable to sleep after family and friends night and churning out what seems to be a whole new menu. (That’s a guess based on the trailer.) That’s unsustainable and, frankly, annoying for diners, but it’s also a sign that Carmy is flailing. The Bear is barely open and already he’s looking ahead to the next step. They don’t even have their feet under them in terms of service and he’s already trying to get a Michelin star. While you could make the argument that good, boundary-pushing restaurants probably do think about these kinds of things from day one, they’re also (hopefully) run by crack teams of people who aren’t leveraged to the hilt with stolen money or who desperately need therapy of literally any kind to deal with decades of emotional trauma. (And I’m not just talking about Carmy, either.) Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

nystar2000
June 27, 2024 at 4:47 AM
Beautiful first episode of the season. One thing the show really captures well is grief: how it ripples out through every era of our lives, weighing on us, driving us — how we keep f*cking going, as it were. Here we get to see Carmy, Marcus, and even Claire fight through grief to fulfill their life's calling. It changes us. In a way, Carmy didn't come back from New York — not the same Carmy anyway.

3. True Detective: Night Country

Photo: HBO

Season 4, Episode 1: It’s hard at the start of a crime series to tell what’s going to be important later, even more so with True Detective, which doesn’t just focus on solving a crime but unlocking the psyches of the people solving it and the character of the place where a thing this awful could happen. How did Liz become the hard woman we meet in episode one? Leah offers up a clue, obliquely suggesting that her father was killed in a drunk-driving incident like the one they witnessed earlier that day. But something has undeniably been shaken open in Liz. She refuses to engage with Leah on the subject, but asleep at night, she loses her grip. She dreams about a small boy whispering, “Mommy,†his hand on her shoulder. She hears that same menacing incantation from Tsalal: “She’s awake.†Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

pbutler111
January 16, 2024 at 7:44 PM
I usually comment on the shows recapped here, not the recaps themselves. But all I could think when I finished this recap was just how beautifully written it is. Well done.

2. House of the Dragon

Photo: Ollie Upton/HBO

Season 2, Episode 8: War is like the horizon on House of the Dragon, receding no matter how (and how many times) you approach it. I’m so primed for battle at this point that I’m rooting against Alicent’s last-gasp plea for peace. Burn the innocents! Sink the recently rechristened Queen Who Never Was! This series’ most persistent flaw is that it is forever pulling back when it should run headlong, saving “story†for some imaginary later, taking for granted that we’ll keep tuning in. It’s so afraid of running out of gas that it never dares to floor it, which is especially damning for a show that insists its protagonists are reckless, twitchy, dangerous. We already know that the Targaryen tapestry being woven by an invisible hand in the opening credits will end up torn and tattered, the family and its dragons needlessly circling the drain of extinction. At some point, you have to show us. Read the recaps ➼

The commenters say:

rookerk
August 5, 2024 at 3:46 AM
So instead of some action, we get introduced to some more characters with no appeal. Sorry, he is no Jamie Lancaster and she is no Brienne of Tarth. Mud wrestling, yawn!

➼ Bonus recap! Don’t miss Brian Grubb’s weekly House of the Dragon scorecard.

1. ShÅgun

Photo: Katie Yu/FX

Season 1, Episode 10: There are two ways of looking at “A Dream of a Dream.†It can be seen as an anticlimax, one that offers only a fleeting glimpse of the battle that will bring Toranaga to power. (It is called ShÅgun. It would have to end with that outcome, even if the James Clavell novel that serves as the source material wasn’t based on historical fact.) From another, and I suspect this will be the way most viewers who’ve stuck with the show will see it, it’s the finale the series needs, one more concerned with its characters and the overarching story of how nations get made than sword-clanging action (not that ShÅgun has lacked that either). Read the recaps âž¼

The commenters say:

angelicafun
April 24, 2024 at 1:24 AM
Pouring out one for Yabushige, the baddest bitch in this era if Japan. An angel got its wings every time he grunted.

What an excellent series, leave me here to sob about the scene between Fuji (best nun!) and Blackthorne.
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