Sandra Oh Reveals Divisive ‘Killing Eve’ Finale Was ‘Going to Be the Other Way Around,’ Kill Different Character
“I was like, ‘You should kill my character.’ I thought that would be the strongest and the most interesting [ending].”
“I was like, ‘You should kill my character.’ I thought that would be the strongest and the most interesting [ending].”
“It’s an extraordinary privilege to see your characters brought to life so compellingly,” novelist Luke Jennings wrote, “but the final series ending took me aback.”
Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer’s romantic thriller has seen diminishing returns, but it still deserved a better goodbye than Season 4’s finish.
Sandra Oh can’t escape the long (and scary) arm of the past in Iris K. Shim’s alternately impressive and muddled feature directorial debut.
Sandra Oh and Jodie Comer’s combustible chemistry is further diluted by a final season filled with extraneous characters, trivial pursuits, and muted growth.
Eve (Sandra Oh) and Villanelle (Jodie Comer) still can’t get enough of each other in the gruesome trailer for “Killing Eve”‘s fourth and final season.
Oh’s vibrant performance alone makes the three-hour limited series a joy, while showrunner Amanda Peet brings equal passion to lampooning academia.
Oh plays Ji-Yoon Kim, a new department chair brought in to avert a crisis caused by a professor played by Jay Duplass.
DuVernay was critical of the Hollywood Foreign Press for not having any Black members in the voting body.
Our favorite self-destructive anti-heroines are back, baby! And two weeks earlier than expected.
The Gold House A100 List celebrates the AAPI community and their contributions to society.
Sandra Oh, Jodie Comer, and showrunner Emerald Fennell weigh in on the changes in the Season 2 premiere.