‘Room 104’ Episode ‘Itchy’ Is as Unsettling as TV Found Footage Gets
Arturo Castro gives one of the most magnetic performances of the entire HBO series in a story about a man whose body starts to rebel against him.
Arturo Castro gives one of the most magnetic performances of the entire HBO series in a story about a man whose body starts to rebel against him.
Four seasons of creativity are now yours to explore — if you haven’t yet dove headfirst into this world, now’s a great time to start.
Mark Duplass’ low-budget, high-concept anthology series saw an impressive array of talent transform its dingy, magical motel room.
Mark and Jay Duplass’ diverse episodic anthology series will debut its fourth and final season this month.
All 34 episodes have taken place within the relative confines of a single motel room, but there’s no sign of this show running out of ideas any time soon.
More than ever, the joy of this unpredictable, motel-set HBO series is discovering the ways it chooses to circumvent its own boundaries.
The HBO series will welcome Sam Richardson, Luke Wilson, Aasif Mandvi, So Yong Kim, Macon Blair, and Patrick Brice to this year’s festivities.
Writer-director Julian Wass and Brian Tyree Henry faced arduous performing challenges while creating a stand-out episode of “Room 104.”
Mark and Jay Duplass’ HBO series is so efficient, Season 3 is already wrapped.
The variety of storytelling on display builds such tingly anticipation, each new episode is worth it even when the narrative disappoints.
Michael Shannon, Brian Tyree Henry, Josephine Decker, and So Yong Kim will all make contributions to the HBO anthology, which returns next month.
Duplass said the gay themes “just kind of unfolded naturally” in “The Missionaries,” where two young Mormons test their faith with their own mini-rumspringa.