All’s Fair review – Kim Kardashian’s divorce drama is fascinatingly, existentially terrible…


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All’s Fair review – Kim Kardashian’s divorce drama is fascinatingly, existentially terrible

Not even Glenn Close can save this Ryan Murphy disaster from its dismal plots, clueless characters – and the worst kissing scenes ever filmed

I did not know it was still possible to make television this bad. I assumed that there was some sort of baseline, some inescapable bedrock knowledge of how to do it that now prevents any entry into the art form from falling below a certain standard. But I was wrong. The new series from Ryan Murphy, All’s Fair – starring Kim Kardashian, Naomi Watts and Niecy Nash as the founders of an all-female law firm delivering divorce-y justice to incredibly rich but slightly unlucky women under the azure skies of California – is terrible. Fascinatingly, incomprehensibly, existentially terrible. While I try to get my thoughts in order after bearing witness to the first episode, I’m going to give you a few direct quotes, so you can see why I’m struggling.

'All's Fair' Review: Kim Kardashian Legal Drama Is Clumsy

SPOILER ALERT: This review contains plot details from the first three episodes of “All’s Fair,” now streaming on Hulu.

It probably says all you need to know about “All’s Fair” that a legal drama ostensibly about women’s empowerment begins with a pilot written and directed by men. In fact, of the three episodes now streaming on Hulu to mark the series’ premiere, only one includes a major credit by a female creative — and it’s shared between executive producer Jamie Pachino and co-creator Ryan Murphy, who collaborated on the script for Episode 2. But this is a review, so I’m obligated to expand: “All’s Fair” is a clumsy, condescending take on rah-rah girlboss feminism, half-baked even by the standards of an overextended Murphy, who co-created the show with Joe Baken and Jon Robin Baitz. It’s true that the tone is intentionally camp-adjacent, and if one squints they could discern the vague outlines of a parody. But that’s little consolation when “All’s Fair” demonstrates such a low opinion of its own viewers, assuming we’ll bark like seals when fed disconnected scraps of sassy one-liners, flashy outfits and men-ain’t-shit commiseration.

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'All's Fair' Logs Biggest Hulu Originals Scripted Debut In 3 Years

In a clear division between viewers and critics and an intriguing media case study, All’s Fair, the noisy new Ryan Murphy legal drama starring and executive produced by Kim Kardashian, has delivered Hulu Originals’ biggest scripted series premiere in three years, amassing 3.2M views globally after three days of streaming.

All’s Fair, in which attire mogul and relative acting novice Kardashian is surrounded by such heavy hitters and Murphy regulars as Naomi Watts, Niecy Nash-Betts, Sarah Paulson and Glenn Close as well as rising star Teyana Taylor, premiered on Hulu on Nov. 4 to scathing — including zero-star — reviews. (The show’s Rotten Tomatoes score, initially at 0%, has since climbed to 5%.)

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