The Day
- El episodio se transmitió el 25 feb 2025
- TV-MA
- 59min
CALIFICACIÓN DE IMDb
9.5/10
6.2 k
TU CALIFICACIÓN
Sinatra y Xavier se enfrentan al pasado, volviendo al angustioso día que los llevó al Paraíso.Sinatra y Xavier se enfrentan al pasado, volviendo al angustioso día que los llevó al Paraíso.Sinatra y Xavier se enfrentan al pasado, volviendo al angustioso día que los llevó al Paraíso.
- Dirección
- Guionistas
- Elenco
Sarah Shahi
- Dr. Gabriela Torabi
- (solo créditos)
Nicole Brydon Bloom
- Jane Driscoll
- (solo créditos)
Opiniones destacadas
Best episode of a great show, riveting from start to finish! The whole episode is dedicated to what happened that fateful day and boy was it was intense! I'm glad they didn't string us along in telling us what happened like other shows have done in the past, only to get canceled and leave the viewer feeling unfulfilled. But not only did they tell us, they dedicated a whole episode to it and it was beautifully done! I'm loving the series already but this episode definitely took it up a notch. I just finished watching and about to rewatch it right away. Put the phones down and buckle up for this one...you won't want to miss anything!
10yngsvgt
I don't usually leave reviews, but this show and episode specifically is one of the few examples of how to correctly orchestrate a non-linear timeline of events.
The curiosity and tension to finding out what exactly happened on "the day" has been building up for the past 6 episodes, and it was truly delivered upon in this episode despite the bar being raised so high.
No one is given too much or too little screen time, the set design and backgrounds were great and it truly demonstrated the hectic events in a doomsday scenario. Reminiscent to the movie 2012 in a way also, but with more focus on how regular people react with each other even in "non-essential" government - which was an interesting perspective.
Looking forward to what's next!!
The curiosity and tension to finding out what exactly happened on "the day" has been building up for the past 6 episodes, and it was truly delivered upon in this episode despite the bar being raised so high.
No one is given too much or too little screen time, the set design and backgrounds were great and it truly demonstrated the hectic events in a doomsday scenario. Reminiscent to the movie 2012 in a way also, but with more focus on how regular people react with each other even in "non-essential" government - which was an interesting perspective.
Looking forward to what's next!!
Absolutely amazing episode. Tense, dramatic, and still full of surprises. TV doesn't get much better than this. This episode goes right to the heart of the mysteries and reveals much of what has lead up to this point. Sterling K Brown and James Marsden once again give complex, layered, emotional performances that, I hope will earn them Emmy awards. Julianne Nicholson again makes you genuinely hate her character. This is shaping up to be one of the best shows of the year - and when you're up against another season of Severence that's high praise. Too often these shows drag mysteries out over multiple seasons. Bravo to Paradise for bucking that trend.
10stjoya
Wow. Normally after enjoying a film or tv show, the day after watching is the most important time for me to fully make an opinion of what I had watched the day before. This episode was, and I mean this with no hyperbole, one of the best hours of media I have ever watched. The intensity, despair and raw emotions were potent from start to finish. The closest I could compare this episode to in terms of tone and quality would be Christopher Nolan's Interstellar. Superb acting from the cast, from top to bottom. Though James Marshden has taken a backseat (for obvious reasons) throughout this series, his acting really shone through. Sterling K. Brown truly is a master at emotional acting, particularly at his ability to show emotion without crying, and Julianne Nicholson's portrayal of Sinatra seems almost paradoxical; such a good antagonist without being "bad" or "evil".
Wow. This show is really something else. Please don't let this show be interfered with in any way because it is amazing.
Episode 7 was maybe one of the best episodes of tv I've watched in a decade. Wow. From start to finish you are at the edge of your seat with great acting, writing, set design and score.
Sterling K Brown and James Marsden make this episode. Everyone else is amazing including Julianne Nicholson and Krys Marshall but they all really carry this episode and season. The story structure has maybe been done a few times but this somehow finds a way in to be so original in a time we need originality.
Can't wait for the final episode and season 2. Bring it on!!
Episode 7 was maybe one of the best episodes of tv I've watched in a decade. Wow. From start to finish you are at the edge of your seat with great acting, writing, set design and score.
Sterling K Brown and James Marsden make this episode. Everyone else is amazing including Julianne Nicholson and Krys Marshall but they all really carry this episode and season. The story structure has maybe been done a few times but this somehow finds a way in to be so original in a time we need originality.
Can't wait for the final episode and season 2. Bring it on!!
The 77th Emmys Acting Nominees in Character
The 77th Emmys Acting Nominees in Character
Check out our gallery of the nominees in the leading and supporting acting categories.
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- TriviaAccording to an entry in the Encyclopedia Britannica written by Fred Frommer, the "nuclear football" (often shortened in context to just "the football") is "a specially designed briefcase that accompanies the president of the United States when the president is away from the White House and whose contents would enable the president to decide upon and order the use of nuclear weapons in the event of a national emergency. According to a book published in 1980 by a former director of the White House military office, the Presidential Emergency Satchel, as the nuclear football is officially known, contained a set of codes that the president would read aloud to authenticate his identity to military authorities, a list of optional plans for preemptive or retaliatory nuclear strikes, a list of sites where the president could safely stay during a nuclear conflict, and a description of procedures for using the country's Emergency Broadcast System (later replaced by the Emergency Alert System). Some observers, noting the occasional appearance of what looked to be an antenna extending from the top of the nuclear football, surmised that it also contained a device that the president could use to securely communicate with military authorities. Accounts of the origin of the nickname nuclear football often cite a claim attributed to Robert McNamara, who served as U.S. secretary of defense from 1961 to 1968, to the effect that the nickname was derived from an early nuclear-war plan that had been code-named 'Operation Dropkick.' A dropkick is a rarely used play in American football. The nuclear football in its current form was created in response to concerns raised by Pres. John F. Kennedy after the 1962 Cuban missile crisis. Among the questions he raised, a declassified memo shows, were 'What would I say to the Joint War Room to launch an immediate nuclear strike?' and 'How would the person who received my instructions verify them?' Every president since Kennedy has traveled with the nuclear football."
- ConexionesFeatured in The 77th Primetime Emmy Awards (2025)
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Detalles
- Tiempo de ejecución
- 59min
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