Since Prohibition has so far not stopped the Boardwalk Empire gang from getting their booze, there should be no problem with throwing a roaring St. Patrick's Day Eve celebration. Unfortunately, the St. Patrick celebration turns into a punching celebration.
Tonight's Boardwalk Empire finds our Prohibition friends in need. Chalky needs to find a lynching suspect, Jimmy and Al need some Chicago territory, and Nucky just needs to dance. All the Steve Buscemi rug-cutting you could ever want, inside!
Tonight's Boardwalk Empire showed us that the businessmen of the 1920's did things a little differently. While today's captains of industry walk on eggshells with the press, the gangsters of long ago dealt with the press more forcefully.
After it racked up some 7.1m viewers over two broadcasts on Sunday night, HBO has ordered another go-around of their Prohibition drama after only one episode. Meanwhile, John From Cincinnati sits by the phone, still waiting, still hoping.
Well, last night HBO unrolled its latest great hope, a high-budget, prestige drama all about Prohibition-era Atlantic City and its various denizens — from honest but grimy to wealthy but crimey. (Whee!) What'd we all think?
Tonight, HBO began a quest to reclaim its crown as the king of dramatic television with Boardwalk Empire. Does Martin Scorsese's foray to the small screen live up to the hype and succeed in being the best TV show ever?
In this hilarious spoof on Boardwalk Empire, violence and intrigue erupt over the community chest and getting to Boardwalk and Park Place before everybody else. Things to take a turn for the worse when double sixes are rolled...
Set in Atlantic City during the 1920's, Boardwalk Empire explores the golden era of gangsters in which the likes of Al Capone and Lucky Luciano take on John Q. Law over the Prohibition act. Trailer inside.
Two new shows from two old talents, Terrence Winter's Boardwalk Empire and David Simon's Treme, are debuting this year on HBO and we couldn't be more excited. Just look at these two new longer-form trailers.
Young people do extraordinary things in Hollywood, and make, I'm assuming, extraordinary money. Some good news about television, plus some bad news. And a film wins a very deserving prize.