As someone who has never comprehended the appeal of math, an episode like "The Numberland Gap" -which deals in formulas and equations- was always going to be a bit of a tough sell for me, regardless of its quality otherwise. Math jokes are part of the fabric of Futurama though , given the educational calibre of the people behind it (they've joked they are the most overqualified writers' room in television), though I can't recall an episode where they have been this central a feature. The episode is credited to "Ken Walsh", but longtime fans of the show will recognize the distinctive hand of Ken Keeler a mile away (why he is still using a pseudonym remains a mystery), widely regarded as the show's nerdiest writer when it comes to math and quantum physics material. He eases the audience in via a dinner at the Krokers where Bender picks up the signal of a numbers station -real things as the show makes clear that exist for espionage purposes- and it is...
Scarlett Johansson finally steps behind the camera and what she produces is the Dear Evan Hansen of Holocaust survivor dramas. I feel like it is important to acknowledge that upfront, as it speaks to exactly what to expect from such a stark misfire of a movie as Eleanor the Great . Just like with Dear Evan Hansen it takes a very blunt and tone-deaf hand to difficult subject matter it is ill-equipped to reckon with and attempts to impart some meaningless moral arc for a pretty egregiously selfish protagonist by cloaking them in the stolen trauma of another person (a dead person at that). I can’t tell whether substituting suicide for the Holocaust is a worse or just lateral move, but making sweet old June Squibb the nexus of it feels like the crueler choice. She plays Eleanor Morgenstein, a woman in her nineties who moves back to New York from retirement in Florida when her roommate and best friend Bessie (Rita Zohar), a Holocaust survivor, passes away. Living now with her da...