Ovation
- El episodio se transmitió el 25 jun 2020
- TV-MA
- 42min
Agrega una trama en tu idiomaA struggling singer's music career takes off when she witnesses a tragic incident, but she soon realizes that her recognition comes at a steep cost.A struggling singer's music career takes off when she witnesses a tragic incident, but she soon realizes that her recognition comes at a steep cost.A struggling singer's music career takes off when she witnesses a tragic incident, but she soon realizes that her recognition comes at a steep cost.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
- Teen #1
- (as Caiden Valderrama)
Opiniones destacadas
So they took that moment of clarity and wrote this episode, exploring that notion of unearned applause and appreciation. Well, good on them.
Season 2 is faring much better than season 1, and maybe part of that was an acknowledgment that merely reciting wokey tropes wasn't actually "storytelling", so they went another direction. Like, "hey, how about if we wrote some good episodes for a change?"
Whatever it was, I'd say "keep it up" but then they decided against doing season 3. Oh well. Can't say they'll be missed.
The message of this episode is not about the two sisters or fame it's about society and people's obsessions with celebrities and how ridiculous it's become.
Rating things low because you don't grasp them is insane.
Jasmine Delancey (Jurnee Smollett) is a busker and struggling musician who life is changed when Fiji (Sky Ferreira), the most popular performing artist of the moment hands her a gold coin, before walking out into traffic. After performing at an impromptu memorial, Jasmine lands a gig on a TV talent show that catapults her to superstardom. Though this puts an immediate strain on her relationship with her sister Zara (Tawny Newsome) it's not until the crowds are stalking her every movement, and the standing ovations come regardless of how good she is, that Jasmine begins to question the validity of this fame.
It's not the worst premise for a "Twilight Zone", in fact we've looked at unearned fame at personal cost before - nor is it badly performed, Jurnee Smollet was one of the stars of 2020, Newsome is a good comic performer and there are smaller roles for Paul F. Tompkins and Thomas Lennon. The problem with the episode, again, is that it's a 'premise' and not a 'story'. We don't see her for long enough, or her career go high enough, for Jasmine to plausibly accept that the coin is behind it. She wins the relatively crappy looking music contest and that's about it from what we see. She far too quickly becomes a reclusive artist at the "Evil Dead" shack before immediately suffering a psychotic break and wreaking revenge on her replacement. It's all too quick and unearned by the story. The twist in that ending too is one that you'll see coming from miles away too and when you think about it with any depth, doesn't really make sense.
Another disappointing entry in a series that overall is sinking from patchy to poor.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaJasmine reads a Latin inscription on the coin: Invenibus in aliis vero. This translates to, "in others, they found"
- ErroresThe newspaper article says that Jasmine's last name is Devon, but dialogue and other material throughout the episode, including the cover of the magazine, say her last name is Delancey.
- Citas
The Narrator: [opening narration] Jasmine Delancey has spent her entire life in search of one thing. Applause. Now that she's found it, it's given her a new sense of meaning. But what exactly is the value of an ovation so loud, it drowns out performance? Jasmine's about to find out here in the Twilight Zone.
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 42min
- Color