Nick Nunziata created this place and spends every day trying to figure out if that's a good thing or not. In addition to his intermittent contributions here, he is the producer of a few upcoming films, a myriad of comics, and the co-writer on Steve Alten's upcoming novel Grim Reaper, based on the screenplay by the pair.
BUY IT AT AMAZON: CLICK HEREThe Pitch
The world of advertising in the early 1960's is in a time of change and the Sterling Cooper agency is at the forefront of it, something which causes plentiful drama for the employees, clients, and their families.
The Humans
Cast: John Hamm. Vincent Kartheiser. Elizabeth Moss. January Jones. John Slattery.
The Nutshell
From the phenomenal Saul Bass-esque opening credits to the last bit of text at the end of the show, Mad Men excels in knowing which aspects of the period to showcase and which to be restrained about. The only times the show revels in the kitsch or dated aspects of the time is when it serves to showcase how much we've changed since then or how much we haven't. Seeing products of the time, vehicles, and the advertising could easily have served as sight gags or moments where the production designer showed off but instead they do the heavy lifting of getting the point across. It's nice to see a period show that doesn't feel like a backlot or an exaggerated recreation of the time but rather a subdued take with occasional highlighted moments that reflect the simpler but no less subversive era. For an example of a moment that is simple yet speaks volumes, the image below:
The Package
8.5 out of 10