AMC wants to kill the classic American sitcom.
In a sense,Singapore Archives they already did. The hallowed golden era of late aughts and early 2010s prestige television drama owes many thanks to the network that brought us Breaking Badand Mad Men. At the same time — organically, not via murder — the multi-camera sitcom that dominated so many years of American television began to fade away. The shows that remain are time capsules, trying arduously to either preserve a bygone sense of humor, or fight against it.
AMC's latest, Kevin Can F**k Himself, is part sitcom — and damn good at it. Half the show is filmed with multiple cameras and a laugh track, focused on the world of Kevin (Eric Peterson) and his man-child shenanigans. But the bulk of the show is a chilling primetime drama, complete with drugs, murder fantasies, and at least one dead body as of episode 4. Thisis the real story of Kevin Can F**k Himself, the seething catharsis of Kevin's long suffering wife Allison (Annie Murphy) and her quest to reclaim the life he stole from her.
And so: Kevin Can F**k Himself is the explicit revenge of the sitcom wife against her husband, his world, and the sitcom medium itself. Most men on the show are two-dimensional at best, all half-baked schemes and ham-fisted punch lines — a glaring indictment of countless female characters boiled down to wife, girlfriend, or otherwise hapless participant in the man's world. Even the physical gags are deliberate. In Kevin's show, his wife always bears the brunt of a beer bong or spoonful of chili, while Allison repeatedly causes accidental physical harm to men who misconceive her.
Episode 1 ends with a juicy cliffhanger and mission statement, but the next few meander along some predictable paths while getting Allison back to her new vision of the future. But Allison and Patty’s (Mary Hollis Inboden) begrudging camaraderie, as well as an old flame who works at the local diner, keep us pushing through. Even Kevin’s cheesy sitcom plots are as compelling as they can be, including a feud with the neighbors and attempt to design an escape room.
Kevin Can F**k Himselfis a a dark comedy in the most literal sense, splicing sitcom laughs with true AMC drama, down to the color palette — but that juxtaposition redefines this hybrid genre. As an audience member, you can’t resist chortling along with a laugh track, out of habit or brain chemistry or both. This makes the comedown to Allison’s private world even rougher. You can feel the ache of regret and resentment in Murphy's every minor facial movement, as compelling and in command of the character as she was on Schitt's Creek. She slips into Allison with ease (accent and all), creating a living, breathing, irresistible character who we can't tear our eyes away from.
The show may be about sitcoms and Kevin, but it's no stretch to see how it applies to generations of men who live life as the star of their own TV show. "The world revolves around him, and if it doesn't, he blows it up," she says. Kevin's harmless goof persona proves toxic, robbing Allison of everything that gives her joy — including, finally, her hope. After years of picturing a future in which the good times were just out-of-reach, the fantasy cracks like glass in her hands. The new future, revolving around Allison, is far more interesting.
The first two episodes of Kevin Can F**k Himself are now streaming on AMC+, with new episodes weekly. All episodes will air one week later on AMC.
Poem: The Listener by John BurnsideCome Celebrate Our Fall Issue by Deirdre FoleyThe Maserati Kid by Thomas BellerJames Salter Wins the 2010 Rea Award by The Paris ReviewPolaroids by Misty WoodfordStaff Picks: Dioramas, Donald Young and Stardom by The Paris ReviewReading 'House of Holes' in Public by Andrew PalmerStaff Picks: The Unseen Bestiary, The Avoidance of Love by The Paris ReviewPoem: Episode by Jennifer Michael HechtAge Gaps; Authorial Décor by Sadie SteinStaff Picks: Delightful Fuckers, Ephemeral New York by The Paris ReviewTPR vs. NYM: Bittersweet Victory by Cody WiewandtMystic River by James FrancoAge Gaps; Authorial Décor by Sadie SteinPox: On 'Contagion' by Caleb CrainPortfolio: Miroslav Tichý by Deirdre FoleyStaff Picks: Lucian Freud, Beryl Bainbridge by The Paris ReviewChez Panisse Menus by Patricia CurtanA Week in Culture: Tom Nissley, Writer and GameTexas Forever by Adam Wilson Crazy bike ride plus 'Portal' equals awesome The first reviews of 'T2 Trainspotting' have landed and they're a mixed bag Johnny Depp thanks fans for standing by him in People's Choice Award speech Ellen DeGeneres had the best time ever at the People's Choice Awards This man wants to make dating great again for Trump supporters Backstreet Boy says he 'has faith' in Trump's balls Why Obama's love for basketball was about more than just sports His dad founded Chuck E. Cheese. Now he's opening virtual reality fun zones. Hardcore retiree defies knitting group rules by trolling Donald Trump Streaming service Ozflix will educate you as to the strange, glorious ways of Aussie films CEO offers to fund employees who want to attend Women's March The 'most anticipated' Sundance movies top bloggers can't wait to see Cricketer who fought cancer dazzles after 6 years in the best innings of his life Ellen DeGeneres' touching tribute to President Barack Obama is everything we need today Ariana Grande lookalike has certainly mastered the high ponytail Try not to tear up reading Obama's farewell letter to America The Trump livestream is unbearable but 372 people are holding on for dear life J.K. Rowling shuts down Trump's inauguration with Horcrux Confident dog beats up on a scale for being, well, a scale 'Grand Theft Auto' player builds a $1 million car to get justice against trolls
1.5953s , 10131.6875 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Singapore Archives】,Pursuit Information Network