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A Series Of Unfortunate Events, then, provides an excellent companion piece to the books it’s based on. It’s that rare adaptation that complements, respects, and gently reconfigures its source ...
The series’ opening credits may tell you to “look away,” but if you do, you’ll miss the chance to watch an excellent show with brilliant writing and a gripping plot. Netflix’s A Series ...
A Series of Unfortunate Events returns in much the same mold of Season 1, for better and worse. The show makes some missteps and lacks as many insightful observations as it has previously ...
It's not fair to compare the 2004 film Lemony Snicket's A Series of Unfortunate Events to the new Netflix series A Series of Unfortunate Events.. But let's do it anyway. Both film and TV show ...
A Series of Unfortunate Events Season 1 will be available to stream on Netflix on Friday, January 13. Learn Something New Every Day. Subscribe for free to Inverse’s award-winning daily newsletter!
A Series of Unfortunate Events showrunner Barry Sonnenfeld spoke to EW ahead of the show's next season. Season 3 will be the last one, as it's based on the final installments of Lemony Snicket's ...
A prequel for ‘A Series of Unfortunate Events’ is in the works. Perhaps those questions could be answered with a prequel—and perhaps it’s possible to include the narration by Patrick ...
To backtrack: Lemony Snicket’s A Series of Unfortunate Events is a wildly popular anomaly among children’s books. It somehow found its legs at the same time as the Harry Potter series, and ...
Netflix is getting off to an exciting start in 2017 thanks to the A Series of Unfortunate Events show that is set to debut on January 13. Despite its inspiration coming from a children's book saga ...
“A Series of Unfortunate Events,” adapted from the long-running (11 so far) and enormously successful (27 million copies sold) series of children’s books by the pseudonymous Lemony Snicket ...
What makes “A Series of Unfortunate Events” more than a simple praise-song to reading is its insistence on how useless, even dangerous, a book can be to those who refuse to read between the lines.