‘Mad Men’ Avoids Ambiguity in Stellar Series Finale (TV REVIEW)
[rating=10.00] For months, AMC has touted the final episodes of Mad Men as “the end of an era” – an ending that coincides with both the figurative end to the fictional 1960s
[rating=10.00] For months, AMC has touted the final episodes of Mad Men as “the end of an era” – an ending that coincides with both the figurative end to the fictional 1960s
Let’s have a roaring standing ovation for ‘Mad Men’’s penultimate episode, “The Milk and Honey Route,” which somehow managed to one-up last week’s installment in almost every way imaginable.
[rating=10.00] “I’m Don Draper from McCann Erickson.” It finally happened: the most heartbreaking words Don Draper has ever spoken. Though the moment felt somewhat like a contrived, allegorical puppet show
‘Mad Men’ offers the coup de grâce to SC&P in the season’s most nuanced episode.
While “The Forecast” packed enough content for contentment, it leaves fans wanting more.
Peter Campbell’s cynical, yet genuine, attempt to relate with Don about divorce and love resounds quite prominently throughout the entirety of “New Business.”
Holy fucking shit. I’ve been talking about this show tying up loose ends for the past couple of weeks; well, consider them tied.
This week’s installment has it all: robbery, deceit and explosions. What more could you ask for?
With just two episodes left, this season is shaping up to be a hell of a ride.
This show sure knows how to mass tension. With only three episodes left, all these moving pieces have to find a stopping point; it’s just highly unlikely that any of this ends without all of them colliding into on another.