Sterling K. Brown has reteamed with 'This Is Us' creator Dan Fogelman for 'Paradise,' and once again, he plays a man going through deep family loss and trauma.
Dan Fogelman and plot twists go hand in hand, and this time it is for his latest American political thriller Paradise.
Two IndieWire staffers unpack the twisty Hulu sci-fi mystery from Dan Fogelman ('This Is Us') starring Sterling K. Brown and James Marsden.
When it comes to a television show, what’s the difference between a twist and a trick? Misdirection or deception? An effective mystery or a cheap one? Paradise, the new Hulu show from Dan Fogelman, might have you asking some of these questions.
In Paradise, nothing is how it appears, a fact that becomes increasingly obvious as the first episode plays out on Hulu. If you have yet to tune into the series from creator Dan Fogelman ( This Is Us ), now would be the time to stop reading as we dive into major spoilers.
The actors star in Hulu's "Paradise," which reunites Brown with "This Is Us" creator Dan Fogelman and meditates on climate change and technology.
The early episodes are slow going. Clues about the town’s origins are doled out sparingly, and the murder investigation stalls out once Collins is pulled off of it thanks to his strange behavior after finding the body.
If you have a Hulu subscription, do yourself a favor - watch the excellent new thriller Paradise, from This is Us creator Dan Fogelman, before someone spoils the pilot for you.
Plus, there’s a twist at the end of the premiere episode that will absolutely blow your mind.Paradise is created by Dan Fogelman, who last worked with Brown on the hit NBC drama This Is Us. In an interview with The Hollywood Reporter,
This Is Us creator Dan Fogelman’s intense new political thriller show with 86% on Rotten Tomatoes has just become a big hit on streaming.
A murder mystery that cares as much about exploring the losses each character is actively experiencing as it does about world-building, Paradise hopes to make you cry while keeping you curious