The film stars Halle Bailey as Ariel, Daveed Diggs as the voice of Sebastian, Jacob Tremblay as the voice of Flounder, Awkwafina as the voice of Scuttle, Jonah Hauer-King as Prince Eric, Art Malik as Sir Grimsby, Noma Dumezweni as Queen Selina, Javier Bardem as King Triton, and Melissa McCarthy as Ursula. There are no actor interviews and virtually no discussion of the specific content of the season.Ĭheck out the teaser trailer for The Little Mermaid, the upcoming live-action reimagining of the animated musical classic. While it's an interesting feature from a psychological perspective, it doesn't have much to do with the show itself. They talk about the reasons why people might turn to plastic surgery, and what makes the decision a healthy or unhealthy choice. "Tell Me What You Don't Like About Yourself - The Psychology Behind Plastic Surgery" runs just over 18 minutes and includes interviews with real life plastic surgeons and psychologists as well as the show's producers and writers, intercut with footage from the show. Score: 7 out of 10 Extras and Packaging There's only one special feature on this five-disc set, packaged in a standard-sized clear flipper case. It doesn't stand out as a spectacular showcase, but it gets the point across and you won't miss a beat. There are a few big, dramatic moments here and there, and they are strongly supported by proficient use of the sound field, surround channels and LFE. Languages and Audio The Dolby Digital 5.1 soundtrack isn't tasked with any big action scenes, just a lot of dialogue and atmospheric audio effects (some of them a little too real, like those in the surgery scenes). Matt was never the brightest bulb and he still can't make a good decision to save his life.
Kimber (Kelly Carlson) is still in the mix, with her usual schemes and attempts to reinvent herself, while Matt (John Hensley) is involved in one of the most ridiculous plotlines ever, working as a mime on the Venice boardwalk, and later resulting to armed robbery in full mime makeup. Mike Hamoui (Mario Lopez), who helps bring in business by bringing in new clients. Troy ( Julian McMahon) struggling to keep their practice afloat in a tight economy. The beginning of Season 6 touches on real-world issues as Dr.
But with past storylines having already dealt with self-mutilation, necrophilia, sexual identity confusion, a foursome, a serial killer, neo-Nazis and more messed up clients than the average psychiatrist sees during the course of an entire career, where can you go from there? Perhaps the show pushed too far too fast, and the writers clearly had to stretch themselves to come up with new ideas that hadn't been done before. Once the top-rated show on the FX network, it lost viewers as they became bored with more of the same. By the time it got to the sixth season, the show's once-provocative subject matter began to feel a bit tired.