And after alllllllllllllllladat nonsense, in a supreme insult to the audience who battled their way through this clumsy, miserable yarn, Alice & Jack’s sixth and final episode is a clip show.
After a decently tolerable Episode 4, Alice & Jack punishes us for having let our guard down, pushing the limits of just how much nonsense an audience can take and creating a deeply unpleasant experience.
Suit up, friends. It’s time for Alice & Jack's wedding of the century: Alice and… (checks notes) some poor schmo named Danny. Don't worry; it won't go well.
At the end of last week’s premiere of Alice & Jack, Alice dropped in and then promptly out of Jack’s life again; sadly, that was not the end of their story. Episode 2 brings a new wave of toxic behavior from all sides.
Angsty, depressing, and full of itself, Alice & Jack, the new six-episode miniseries debuting on Masterpiece, is a different animal than the usual fare, billed as a "modern love epic."
DI Ray is a by-the-books procedural except for one major detail: it stars Punjabi-Sikh actor Parminder Nagra and highlights both the internal and external conflicts of working as a woman of color in the police force.
To no one’s surprise, DI Rachita Ray survived the shooting at the end of DI Ray Season 1's penultimate episode unscathed, and she’s back to finish what she started in the season finale.
The third and best episode of Nolly is the most reflective, focusing on the significance of the stories we tell ourselves, the value of maintaining good friendships, and the sadness of not knowing what you’ve got til it’s gone.