I have added HD screencaptures from last night episode.
GALLERY LINKS:
– Screen Captures 4×12 – A Roy Rogers in Franconia
I have added HD screencaptures from last night episode.
GALLERY LINKS:
– Screen Captures 4×12 – A Roy Rogers in Franconia
Ding-dong! It’s Pastor Tim at the front door.
“I don’t feel right about what happened … that you felt frightened for your safety because of something that happened to me,” he tells Mr. and Mrs. Jennings.
They tell him it’s okay, but the Pastor, having just survived being lost in Ethiopia while serving as a missionary there, says they’re being generous. He apologizes for his wife threatening to expose their spy background, and says he finally understands what it feels like to fear for your well-being.
The Jennings family invites him and Alice to dinner. What better way to make amends than to break bread?
The title of this episode is “Dinner for Seven,” so we can count on at least one more surprise guest at that meal.
At Gabriel’s, Elizabeth’s handler presents her with a special treat from the old country: pierogi. He also has bad news: The center turned down her request to stop manipulating Don and Young Hee to gain Level Four access to the bio-weapons facility. “It has to move forward,” Gabriel tells her.
So Elizabeth fulfills her duty. After drugging Don and tricking him into thinking he slept with her, she goes to the house when he’s alone and tells him she’s pregnant. He is shocked, horrified, and tells her she shouldn’t have the baby. He offers to pay for an abortion, but Elizabeth, a.k.a. “Patty,” scoffs at the suggestion.
Continue reading The Americans recap: ‘Dinner For Seven’
I have added HD screencaptures from last night episode.
GALLERY LINKS:
– Screen Captures 4×11 – Dinner for Seven
The Americans is coming to end. But at least not for awhile.
FX has given the acclaimed drama series a final, two-season pickup. A 13-episode fifth season will air in 2017, with a 10-episode sixth and final season to follow in 2018.
“It’s hard to believe we’re heading into the final stretch on The Americans, and we’re so grateful to know we’ll be telling the story to its conclusion,” said showrunners Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg in a statement. “The best part of the last four years has been the intensive and fruitful collaboration with all of the people who make this show …We’re looking forward to the final two.”
Added FX president of original programming Eric Schrier: “Through its first four seasons, critics have lauded The Americans as one of the best shows on television and, remarkably, a series that keeps getting better every year. All credit for that achievement goes to everyone who has worked on the show.”
The announcement will give the showrunners plenty of time to craft a final arc to their tale of married Soviet spies (Keri Russell, Matthew Rhys) in the 1980s. Perhaps the espionage thriller will also score an Emmy or two for its stars or showrunners as well – despite the drama’s love from critics (The Americans currently averages a chart-topping 95 out of 100 on Metacritic), Emmy and Golden Globes wins have eluded the series (aside from a guest actress Emmy for Margo Martindale).
Three episodes remain in the current season, with the season 4 finale airing June 8.
Source: http://www.ew.com
I knew right away there was going to be trouble when they had Richard Thomas say, “Previously, on The Americans…”
That felt like a nod, a tribute. A goodbye.
The episode begins at Young Hee’s house, where Don is pretty glum at a family dinner with Elizabeth. Last week, she drugged him and tricked him into thinking they’d had sex — part of a plan to manipulate him to gain access to the higher levels of the bio-weapons facility where William also works.
We don’t see exactly how this is going to yield results, but it feels like Don’s agony is just beginning.
At home, Philip and Paige are cooking, and she asks about his childhood in Russia. He says it was a tough life. “That’s the way you had to be. After the war, people didn’t have much. It wasn’t about what you liked; it was about hard work and protecting your family,” he says.
He tells her about working at a cooperative where they made rakes. His boss tried to cheat him once. “My mom went over there,” Philip says. “And then he paid me all of it.” Continue reading The Americans recap: ‘Munchkins’
I have added HD screencaptures from last night episode.
GALLERY LINKS:
– Screen Captures 4×10 – Munchkins
The FX series is the best drama on television — not one of the best, the best — and the Golden Globes have given the Emmys a golden opportunity.
The Television Academy is about to have its hour of redemption.
I say this while admitting that my knee-jerk reaction is to follow that sentence with “although it may not be aware of that yet.” However, last year the Emmy voters took a huge step forward in both self-awareness and action, so I’m choosing to believe that the Television Academy is keenly aware of the position it now finds itself in at long last.
When nominations are announced in July, it is, positively, the moment when the Television Academy can snatch back its importance, reputation and relevance.
There are two things needed for the Emmys to matter again, and one of them is already in the books: The Golden Globes had to implode.
Or, if you prefer, the Golden Globes had to revert back to being the Golden Globes -— ridiculous, scattershot, influence-free and pointless (other than being a fine and fun party that can be entertaining when you point a camera at it).
After a number of years where the Golden Globes actively tried to out-influence the Emmys and calculatedly attacked the weakness of the Emmy voters (rubber-stamping the past, refusing to honor many channels or series and the actors in those series and steadfastly refusing to see what was both new and excellent in the rapidly expanding industry), the Globes flat-out gave up in 2016. Continue reading Critic’s Notebook: How the Television Academy Can Save Itself By Nominating ‘The Americans’