“Station Eleven” season 2 might be an anthology, according to actor Mackenzie Davis, and follow a different set of individuals in the universe. According to actor Mackenzie Davis, “Station Eleven” might return as an anthology series for a second season. “Station Eleven”,
“Station Eleven” season 2 might be an anthology, according to actor Mackenzie Davis, and follow a different set of individuals in the universe. According to actor Mackenzie Davis, “Station Eleven” might return as an anthology series for a second season. “Station Eleven”,
“Station Eleven” is a work of great art about the disaster in and of itself because it recognizes the kind of art that would endure and memorialize a disaster. Kirsten Raymonde (Matilda Lawler), 8, calls her parents’ phones repeatedly from the living
In certain aspects, “Station Eleven” defies speculative fiction storytelling conventions. Rather than methodically building up its setting, the series goes right into the characters and story. “Rosencrantz and Guildenstern Aren’t Dead” slows down just enough to fill in several plot holes, such
“I don’t want to die because I chose the wrong life,” Arthur screams at Miranda. It’s such a mild sentiment that it’s universal. Who wouldn’t want to spend their time in this world doing the right thing, whatever that entails? When yelled
Kirsten Raymonde (as an adult, played by Mackenzie Davis) wanders northern Michigan with a group of traveling actors she met in Year Two. That’s when the players discovered her, thirsty and bloodied, holding Miranda’s soiled comic novel. In a ramshackle caravan of
Emily St. is a street in New York City. “The bright side of the globe slides toward darkness / And the cities are falling asleep, each in its hour,” writes poet Czesaw Miosz in the epigraph to John Mandel’s novel Station Eleven.
I understand what you’re going to say about “Station Eleven”. The last thing you want to do after nearly two years of going through a pandemic in real life is watching a show about a pandemic. But here’s the thing: you’re wrong.
A world decimated by a pandemic is depicted in the teaser trailer for HBO Max’s “Station Eleven”. “Station Eleven” follows numerous characters throughout the onset and aftermath of an apocalyptic flu pandemic, based on Emily St. John Mandel’s 2014 novel of the
While we still struggle with the world’s Covid-19 pandemic we can get a fresh glimpse of another type of pandemic – fictional. HBO Max is adapting the best-selling novel written by Emily St. John Mandel called “Station Eleven“. “Station Eleven” story is