'Servant' Season 2 Review: A Nerve-Wracking Mystery Gets More Unhinged & Frustrating
Collider· 2 days agoJericho, the infant son of well-to-do Philadelphia couple Sean and Dorothy Turner, is missing at the...
Servant: How Episode 1's Security Password Change Foreshadows Season 2
Screen Rant· 2 days agoIn M. Night Shyamalan's Apple TV+ series Servant, the home security passcode changes after episode...
Rupert Grint Reacts to Beating Jennifer Aniston and David Attenborough's Instagram Records...
ET Online via AOL· 1 day agoRupert Grint is a wizard on the big screen and a Guinness World Record holder in real life! The...
Rupert Grint Reacts to Beating Jennifer Aniston and David Attenborough's Instagram Records...
WGRZ-TV Buffalo· 1 day agoRupert Grint is a wizard on the big screen and a Guinness World Record holder in real life! The...
M. Night Shyamalan finds his TV groove with Servant Season 2's 'giggle'-inducing black comedy
Sci Fi Wire· 3 days agoIf you could pick a word that distills director M. Night Shyamalan's three-decade-long career,...
'Servant' creator M. Night Shyamalan explains why he's 'obsessed' with cults like NXIVM
Yahoo TV· 2 days agoCult television took on a whole new meaning last year when stuck-at-home viewers got hooked on the...
Oh baby, Servant season 2 is getting good: Review
Entertainment Weekly via Yahoo News· 6 days agoThe horror saga from Tony Basgallop and M. Night Shyamalan also remains a gripping mystery, blending tension-release giggles with even bleaker moments of...
Servant’s second season mines darkly absurdist humor from its outsized story
The AV Club via Yahoo News· 6 days agoThe first season of Servant largely worked as a self-contained installment, explaining little but...
Servant: Rupert Grint & Nell Tiger Free Tease Big Twists for Their Characters
CBR.com· 2 days agoServant stars Rupert Grint and Nell Tiger Free discussed how the characters get pulled closer...
How Dickinson Sharply Critiques Victorian Society
CBR.com· 2 days agoDickinson uses its modern twist as a fun way to poke fun at the absurdities of 1800s New England society.