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It’s only January, but we feel pretty safe saying we won’t see a more surreal and confounding season finale this year than the one The Curse just served up. Let’s try to make sense of it!
Asher is left clinging to a branch as Moses is forced to take Whitney to the hospital. He calls Dougie (Benny Safdie) to stay with Asher as the fire department arrives. Dougie, having no knowledge of what is happening to Asher, believes he is running away from his parental responsibilities, and calls a cameraman to film the situation with a drone.
The Curse is an American satirical black comedy thriller television series created and written by Nathan Fielder and Benny Safdie, and starring Emma Stone, Fielder, and Safdie. It was filmed from June to October 2022 and premiered on streaming and on-demand for all Showtime and Paramount+ with Showtime subscribers on November 10, 2023, before ...
The characters on The Curse, either consciously or unconsciously, seemingly think that might be possible. It's certainly a disease of sorts that Asher and Whitney have, and it seems like it might be trickling down to Nala." [8] Fletcher Peters of The Daily Beast wrote, "Then, The Curse has one last reveal: It's back to Nala. The girl who was ...
In the opening scene of Showtime’s “The Curse,” Asher and Whitney Siegel do a good deed. Well, sort of. The cameras are rolling on the married couple’s new HGTV series, and they’ve ...
The new dark comedy series The Curse is a masterclass in discomfort, following married couple Asher and Whitney (Nathan Fielder and Emma Stone) as they film Flipanthropy, their TV show-within-a ...
Asher talks with the reporter, convincing her that they can give her another news story if she drops the fragment. Later, Dougie has Asher give a little girl, Nala (Hikmah Warsame), a $100 bill and films it to use as B-roll in the show. When they finish filming, Asher takes the bill back, angering Nala. She "curses" him, but Asher dismisses it.
"Under the Big Tree" received very positive reviews from critics. Manuel Betancourt of The A.V. Club gave the episode a "B" grade and wrote, "I know The Curse is supposed to be a comedy (and it's a cringe-inducing one at that), But can we talk about how every episode turns up the Lynchian vibes to give us plenty of scary moments that will haunt us for a good long while?