Tinker, Tailor, Demon, Spy
- El episodio se transmitió el 17 oct 2019
- TV-PG
- 22min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
8.0/10
2.5 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaUncertainty abounds when an unexpected visitor arrives.Uncertainty abounds when an unexpected visitor arrives.Uncertainty abounds when an unexpected visitor arrives.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Benjamin Koldyke
- Brent Norwalk
- (as Ben Koldyke)
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Todo el elenco y el equipo
- Producción, taquilla y más en IMDbPro
Opiniones destacadas
10fskea
Absolutely loved this episode.
Fantastic acting from Jason and Janet again.
Until the just before the end I had no idea what was going to happen... but I had the same thought as Jason when he called Janet girl.
I'm a sitcom snob. Never did the hour-long dramas, never watched anything unscripted. Just sitcoms. Hardly a week goes by but I equate something in life to a bit from Seinfeld. So I feel quite confident in making this statement -- this episode is quite possibly the most creative television programming ever to be broadcast.
The acting is amazing, of course. Every single performance is Emmy worthy, and Ted Danson has reached the top of Mt. Olympus. But it's the writing that's underneath the show, holding it up, propelling it forward, that's so fresh and original and unprecedented and unique and vivid it makes you feel lucky just to experience the words as the characters speak them. And the plotting? Riding the rapid-fire shifts in clues and probabilities, combined with all the outcomes and reveals you never saw coming, is more thrilling than anything they got at Disneyland.
I would be sad knowing that this is their last season except for the fact that we're experiencing a great crop of sitcoms now. Sunnyside. Perfect Harmony. Young Sheldon. The Unicorn. Just to name a few. This is truly a golden age for sitcom writing on television. And none of it -- not the shows I'm watching -- is grotesque. Hooray for the sublime!
The acting is amazing, of course. Every single performance is Emmy worthy, and Ted Danson has reached the top of Mt. Olympus. But it's the writing that's underneath the show, holding it up, propelling it forward, that's so fresh and original and unprecedented and unique and vivid it makes you feel lucky just to experience the words as the characters speak them. And the plotting? Riding the rapid-fire shifts in clues and probabilities, combined with all the outcomes and reveals you never saw coming, is more thrilling than anything they got at Disneyland.
I would be sad knowing that this is their last season except for the fact that we're experiencing a great crop of sitcoms now. Sunnyside. Perfect Harmony. Young Sheldon. The Unicorn. Just to name a few. This is truly a golden age for sitcom writing on television. And none of it -- not the shows I'm watching -- is grotesque. Hooray for the sublime!
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaThe title is a variation of the movie El espía que sabía demasiado (2011), which is about a secret agent working on the inside.
- ErroresEleanor, Jason and Tahani have trouble determining if Michael is the real Michael, or Vicky in a skinsuit. However, all they would have had to do was to ask him about something that they had experienced with him while Vicky was not around, and therefore would not have any knowledge of.
- Citas
[Janet has accidentally blown up Glenn]
Janet: That was not supposed to happen. I've never killed anyone before.
Michael: No, don't worry. Demons can't die. He'll slowly re-form himself over a few months, passing through all the stages of demon growth: larva, slug monster, spooky little girl, teenage boy, giant ball of tongues, uh, social media CEO and then, finally, demon.
- ConexionesReferences Los de arriba y los de abajo (1971)
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