Louie
Louie
TV-MA | 29 June 2010 (USA)
SEASON & EPISODES
  • 5
  • 4
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • 0
  • Reviews
    Matcollis This Movie Can Only Be Described With One Word.
    Maidexpl Entertaining from beginning to end, it maintains the spirit of the franchise while establishing it's own seal with a fun cast
    Keeley Coleman The thing I enjoyed most about the film is the fact that it doesn't shy away from being a super-sized-cliche;
    Brennan Camacho Mostly, the movie is committed to the value of a good time.
    Antonio Nucev There is no greater connection then the one we can have with a girl(male perception observation) and Louie explains it very well in the 4-th season of this show,as every bit of frustration for the male character always leads him to his own self destruction and self pity while the female acts as a counter part to mellow out his brain and calm the ball(the females that really care about their guy really do this). Personally i experienced many warm laughs cause i expected this uplift after the terrible down spiraled situations from season 3 in which the main character was alone to decide many important things for his own future holdings.I applaud Louie C.K for his excellent acting,editing and honesty behind writing.
    fredericks79 I loved this show until episode 4 of this latest (4th) season. It seems Louie has now gone full retard in his show now and has broken those sacred words of wisdom. I'm now on episode 7 and I haven't even chuckled since episode 3. The show has gone from uncomfortable comedy to just unbearably painful to watch and zero funny. He barely speaks anymore, and when he does he barely puts a coherent sentence together. The episode where his daughter get's into trouble at school is one of the most ridiculous scenes I've ever seen in TV history. She violently rips a dress off of a teacher at her school and when he gets there to pick her up no one says anything to him about it!? Give me a break. That is just infuriating unrealistic. He needs to stop forcing these situations to prove his dumb points. Its getting really old and predictable now. Furthermore the idiotic relationship with his Hungarian neighbors is just pointless, stupid, and worst of all not funny. Louie has forgotten you never go full retard, and a comedy can never go full darkness. Without at least 20% funny in his show, the formula falls apart and it just becomes watching a pathetic retard in a fat mans body doing things that make people angry and embarrassed for him. Even Louie's biggest influence Woody Allen would never dare leave out the funny. If Louie is going to pull this show out of its tailspin, he must bring back the funny. With that said Louie is a brilliant and extremely talented comedian and I will keep watching and rooting for him that he turns this ship around.
    kallam-reid Over thinking this show is the hidden gem behind this show,that's if you watch his amazing stand comedy you understand where he stands as a comedian. after being a fan of that for a while and watching that show i think too deeply into the segments and i hope that's a hidden message in the show and the point of the show that their is a causal audience who can appreciate Louis CK and can get on his wave link.but in saying that their is a massive gain or even more for anyone who is deeply into Louis CK's stand up comedy. you feel a deeper thought pattern into every joke and segment of the show. which alone has made this TV show even more enjoyable. I've re-watched episodes that didn't make complete sense to me straight away over again and some of them have a lot more deeper thought.Like the episode in Season 2 ep9 that episode feature a guy who many fans of Louis CK's comedy love in Doug Stanhope and that episode felt like a legit interaction between friends who have been on the comedy circuit for years and one of them is just as good just not as successful and that feeling came to me. its almost contrasting styles and its almost Louie CK respecting Doug Stanhope by putting him in the episode and telling his story through his hit show.
    Justin Sherman The subway rattles through its motions, and Louie sits aboard, watching along with several other disturbed passengers a strange brown fluid lapping a precarious tide against the sides of a depressed seat-cushion. No one in the car wants to guess what the fluid is, everyone is grossed out by it, no one acts. Cut to black and white, as an inspiring tune akin to a tender moment from A Beautiful Mind begins to play in the background, and Louie, giving his head a shake, presses up onto his feet. Wide-eyed his fellow occupants of the subway car watch as, in slow and deliberate selflessness, Louie strikes off his long-sleeved sweater, kneels down, and mops up the strange brown substance... soaking the offending fluid up and out of their hearts. As he rises, martyr and saint, the looks on the subway car turn to glowing smiles of adoration and firm, knowing nods.. old ladies rising to embrace him and young men giving him their applauds. He stirs awake. The fluid is still there. Everyone's still watching it. He gets up and leaves the car. This is Louie. Sometimes it's silly, sometimes it's weird, sometimes it's highly dramatic, but it's richly infused with a dark, grounded, everyman sense of humour... a strange mixture of crushing cynicism and liberating hope. It's so much more than just a sit-com, and is one of the best things on TV today.
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