Tags / period

"period"

6 BuzzVerdicts across Movies (3), TV Shows (3)

Amadeus

4.8

1984 · Milos Forman · 161 min · Drama / Music

Amadeus is a film about the cruelty of having just enough talent to recognize brilliance you'll never possess. F. Murray Abraham delivers one of the great screen performances as a man consumed by envy, and Mozart's music is woven into the storytelling so effectively that it becomes a character in its own right. The historical liberties bother purists, but the film never pretends to be a documentary. It's a lavish, emotionally devastating drama that turns an 18th-century rivalry into something painfully universal.

There Will Be Blood

4.7

2007 · Paul Thomas Anderson · 158 min · Drama

There Will Be Blood is a towering piece of American filmmaking built almost entirely on the strength of one lead performance and the director who knew exactly how to frame it. Daniel Day-Lewis disappears so completely into Daniel Plainview that the character feels less like a creation and more like an excavation of something ugly and real at the heart of American ambition. The pacing demands patience, the tone offers no comfort, and the ending will either floor you or lose you. None of that changes the fact that this is one of the most accomplished films of the 21st century, a movie that keeps revealing new layers every time you return to it.

Barry Lyndon

4.4

1975 · Stanley Kubrick · 185 min · Drama / Period

Barry Lyndon is the most beautiful film Stanley Kubrick ever made, and possibly the most beautiful film anyone has ever made. The candlelit interiors, the painterly compositions, and the natural light photography created a visual standard that no period film has matched in the half-century since. Ryan O'Neal's passive lead performance divides audiences, and the three-hour runtime demands real commitment. But Kubrick turned William Makepeace Thackeray's satirical novel into something that works as both a gorgeous surface and a devastating portrait of ambition, class, and the inevitability of failure. It's a film that gets richer every time you return to it.

The Knick

4.2

2014 · 2 Seasons · Cinemax · Medical Drama

The Knick is one of the most visually ambitious shows ever made for television, a period medical drama directed entirely by Steven Soderbergh that feels nothing like any period piece you've seen before. Clive Owen delivers a ferocious performance as a brilliant, self-destructive surgeon navigating the dawn of modern medicine in 1900s New York, and the show's willingness to confront the racism, corruption, and brutality of the era gives it a weight that transcends its genre. Its two seasons tell a complete story that rewards viewers who can handle its unflinching subject matter.

Snowfall

4.0

2017 · 6 Seasons · FX · Crime / Drama

Snowfall chronicles the crack epidemic's devastation through the story of Franklin Saint, a young man whose ambition transforms him from neighborhood kid to drug kingpin across six seasons of increasingly gripping television. Damson Idris delivers a career-defining performance, and the show's willingness to trace the human cost of the drug trade without flinching gives it a moral weight that elevates it above standard crime drama. A choppy first season gives way to something special once the show finds its footing, and by its final stretch it earns comparisons to the best in the genre. Not every plotline lands, and some characters get shortchanged by the scope of the story, but the core is powerful enough to carry the whole thing.

Taboo

3.6

2017 · 1 Season · BBC One / FX · Drama / Thriller

Taboo is a dark, atmospheric period thriller that lives and dies by Tom Hardy's commanding performance as a man who terrifies empires. The Regency-era London setting is rendered with grimy beauty, and the show builds tension through mood and mystery rather than action. It demands patience and rewards it inconsistently, with some episodes delivering genuinely gripping drama and others losing momentum in murky plotting. The dialogue can be hard to follow, literally and figuratively, and the pacing tests even devoted viewers. But when Hardy is on screen, fully inhabiting a character who seems to operate by rules no one else understands, the show generates a pull that's hard to shake.