In the world of prestige TV, it’s great to have good acting and writing—but sometimes it’s even better to have a viral dance sequence.
And though these scenes might be scripted to look like they come out of nowhere, a more premeditated moment in the season finale of Apple TV+’sto say “so long, farewell.”
In this post-needle-drop, anything-can-go-viral world of prestige TV, it’s great to have good acting, writing, and directing. But sometimes it’s even better to have a good beat you can dance to.says there’s power to the medium of dance because it “can describe things and convey emotions that we all feel…especially when it’s wild and free.
“It's almost like an exorcism out of her body because she’s put up with so much this season,” Fanning says.says that show was always going to find ways to celebrate music simply because “Pete is obsessed with music.” In collaborating with the comedian and series showrunner/co-creatorthey wanted “this undercurrent of joy” to thread through a series that is otherwise about heavy topics like depression and death.
In the sixth episode, “ISO,” which Orley cowrote with Davidson and Miller and features the Jimmy Soul dance, the character is lonely because he’s away from his family for the winter holidays. After scoring some drugs from teens working at a local bowling alley, he feels momentary relief. A spotlight shines on him in an otherwise dark set and the dancing starts.
Orley says it was Davidson’s idea for the number, which came together in a mere 45 minutes after a long day of filming; otherwise, the scene felt too sad and the character’s motivation for the drugs is that he wants them so that hefeel sad.
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