En quête d'amour, de sexe et de gloire avec ses amis à Los Angeles, les rêves prémonitoires d'Ulysse lui font questionner la présence possible d'un complot sombre et monstrueux.En quête d'amour, de sexe et de gloire avec ses amis à Los Angeles, les rêves prémonitoires d'Ulysse lui font questionner la présence possible d'un complot sombre et monstrueux.En quête d'amour, de sexe et de gloire avec ses amis à Los Angeles, les rêves prémonitoires d'Ulysse lui font questionner la présence possible d'un complot sombre et monstrueux.
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Everything made by Gregg Araki is worth watching, at least once. Always great and likely something you have never seen before.
"Now Apocalypse" is fun and sexy and young - and a good,30-minute diversion. It's kind of a better version of the disappointing and cumbersome "Here and Now" in that it involves some "is he or is he not psychic?" poppycock. But I find the characters all goofily likable, although clearly cast based on looks. Some of them seem like they are learning to act as they go. And Gregg Araki does not make easy roles: the tone needs to be just right, kind of self-conscious and arrogant and earnest. In other words...very young. The plot is insignificant: the show is all about Gregg Araki's style and the use of color, light, and young flesh. And how everyone looks (almost) naked. Very 1980s.
When I started watching this is I cringed hard and assumed it was trash but I take it back, it's actually weirdly excellent. TOTALLY worth watching as soon as you let go of your assumptions abt what it is. Yes the millennial affectations are irritating but that's the whole point.
10tspolp
Gregg Araki has consistently changed the game since the 90's with cult hits like
The Doom Generation, and Nowhere. As a longtime fan, I was overjoyed to hear Araki was greenlit a project that culminates his teen apocalypse trilogy into a TV series so many years later. If you're not a fan of cult or queer cinema, this isn't going to be your flavor- guaranteed. What many people don't understand is that fans of his work have been waiting for this since 1999 when his rejected MTV pilot for This Is How The World Ends never saw the light of day until YouTube came along. In the meantime, Araki showed us he's capable of making a beautiful and serious piece of work with Mysterious Skin, and can make us all laugh with a cheap stoner flick starring Anna Faris in Smiley Face. The film Kaboom would ultimately attempt to be Nowhere's successor in 2010, but unfortunately came off as too contrived for my taste. He once again proved he's more than just "trash," with the rather successful indie sleeper White Bird In a Blizzard.
Now Apocalypse is most definitely a spiritual successor to all of the aforementioned 90s works. It was awesome to see the return of the green space alien, as well as what I presume is James Duval's character from "Nowhere" no longer in 1997, but now in 2019, who has become a homeless schizophrenic quite literally being screwed by aliens. The green alien is a visual representation of society's evil upper echelon, right down to an episode featuring an Eyes Wide Shut-style orgy that makes this message clear as day.
I had a feeling this wouldn't be renewed for a 2nd season on Starz, because ultimately Araki's work is (as mentioned) pure cult. It's often never appreciated until much later after the fact by future generations, so maintaining a solid fanbase would be difficult for this type of material. Film students will most certainly get it, the general public - not so much. But it's not for genpop; it's for people who love exploring different types of filmmaking no matter how outrageous they may be.
In this case, Now Apocalypse is a mixture of the surrealism of David Lynch, Bret Easton Ellis' novel Less Than Zero, and the colorful viscera of Gaspar Noe. If you enjoyed HBO's Euphoria, this might float your boat too. It also features the very best of shoegaze alternative music, right down to plenty of tracks originally featured on the Nowhere soundtrack and a dreamy original score by former Cocteau Twins members well-know for their ambience.
This one was made for the diehard fans, and my hats off to Starz for giving this project a chance knowing full-well what kind of ride (and reception) we'd been in for. This is the show we've been waiting for and I was not in the slightest disappointed!
Now Apocalypse is most definitely a spiritual successor to all of the aforementioned 90s works. It was awesome to see the return of the green space alien, as well as what I presume is James Duval's character from "Nowhere" no longer in 1997, but now in 2019, who has become a homeless schizophrenic quite literally being screwed by aliens. The green alien is a visual representation of society's evil upper echelon, right down to an episode featuring an Eyes Wide Shut-style orgy that makes this message clear as day.
I had a feeling this wouldn't be renewed for a 2nd season on Starz, because ultimately Araki's work is (as mentioned) pure cult. It's often never appreciated until much later after the fact by future generations, so maintaining a solid fanbase would be difficult for this type of material. Film students will most certainly get it, the general public - not so much. But it's not for genpop; it's for people who love exploring different types of filmmaking no matter how outrageous they may be.
In this case, Now Apocalypse is a mixture of the surrealism of David Lynch, Bret Easton Ellis' novel Less Than Zero, and the colorful viscera of Gaspar Noe. If you enjoyed HBO's Euphoria, this might float your boat too. It also features the very best of shoegaze alternative music, right down to plenty of tracks originally featured on the Nowhere soundtrack and a dreamy original score by former Cocteau Twins members well-know for their ambience.
This one was made for the diehard fans, and my hats off to Starz for giving this project a chance knowing full-well what kind of ride (and reception) we'd been in for. This is the show we've been waiting for and I was not in the slightest disappointed!
To be honest I have no idea where the storyline of the show is going, but to me the first episode was fun, sexy and lighthearted
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesThe first season was filmed in 40 days.
- Citations
Carly: I'm a millennial, so sexual fluidity is kind of a requirement.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Last Call with Carson Daly: Jemima/Joji/Avan Jogia (2019)
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- How many seasons does Now Apocalypse have?Alimenté par Alexa
Détails
- Durée30 minutes
- Couleur
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What was the official certification given to Now Apocalypse (2019) in Mexico?
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