When I think of the word "roommate" and the world of cinema, my mind immediately drifts to the 2011 horror film *The Roommate*, starring Minka Kelly and Leighton Meester. Honestly, they looked absolutely stunning in that movie. But anyway—while this *Roommates* doesn't follow exactly the same tone, it certainly conveys that same unsettling feeling that something isn't quite right, right from the very start. *Roommates* kicks off with two college students arguing because they’ve been terrible roommates to one another. When they are summoned to the dean's office, he offers to tell them a story to make them realize the magnitude of the offense they are committing by trying to hurt each other in front of a whole crowd of people. The story then transports us to the past, and the dean introduces us to the two protagonists of this twist-filled plot: Celeste and Devon. I know—the way I’m framing this, anyone would think it’s a horror movie. But it’s not; it’s a comedy pr...
The inaugural episode of *The Audacity* proved to be truly chaotic, with countless characters feeling as though their world was crumbling around them; yet, it all felt strangely well-coordinated, and we could already glimpse the points of convergence where all the characters would begin to intertwine. By the end of the first episode, Orson discovered—while eavesdropping on Duncan’s therapy session—that neither of his parents had wanted to take responsibility for him following their divorce; furthermore, he ended up locked in the basement when the housekeeper noticed that the door to the small room where he was hiding had been left open. We see much more of Orson in episodes 2 and 3, and it becomes evident that he will play a highly significant role in the story. Faced with the threat of blackmail (and the fact that Duncan had barged into her home just as she was already feeling paranoid), JoAnne provides Duncan with the name of one of her clients—someone who could become a potential in...