In contrast, what you might think is that neither the glee nor the monster saga (which started with Dahmer), which created Ryan Murphy’s glory. You have to go back in time until … nip/tuck!
Before we were singing in the corridors of high school or with the worst killers in American history, the most influential show of modern television has already transformed everything into this revolutionary medical drama, from 2003 to 2010, across the Atlantic.
All the Excess Lab
NIP/TUCK follows the adventures of Sean McNamara (Dylan Walsh) and Christian Trojan (Julian McMahon), two Miami cosmetic surgeons whose clinic becomes all the excess theater and all excess labs. The first series of Ryan Murphy is essentially blinking, sexy and exaggerated, but also quite brilliant.
The series is already showing Murphy DNA. He is best when he freely puts his black and cheerful humor on vanity, self -esteem, and feast of friction. This ability to mix Gori, Black Humor and Acervo -Social Criticism becomes a trademark of the Creator.
Aesthetic and narrative shock
With six seasons and 109 episodes, NIP/Tuck laid the foundation for the whole world of Murphy. We realize that Ryan Murphy’s chaos did not begin with the history of Gli or even American horror. By reconsidering the NIP/Tuck, we see that he has deformed the beauty of society for decades, ugly and public desires.
The series does not delay in detail the surgical operations, already questioning the standards of beauty and the consumer community with unprecedented violence on TV. This is evil, but a good dose of black humor helps to maintain the story over time and helps to apply a series to the viewer. Yes, he has always managed to maintain this unwanted equilibrium between discomfort and charm.

Genios DNA exercise
Retrospectively, the nip/tuck seems to be crucified in the whole Murphy world. There is already this obsession for damaged bodies (American horror story), this brutal criticism of appearance (politician), this tenderness marginal (posture), and this taste for pure provocation (Dahmer).
Ryan Murphy became synonymous with horror television, but his first great success was an extraordinary medical series. Without Pin/Tak, there is no Murphy Empire. This series remains the basis of everything, the creator’s matrix that has never stopped our concern.
NIP/TUCK AVAILABLE AVAILABLE AT THE PM until October 9.
Source: Allocine

Rose James is a Gossipify movie and series reviewer known for her in-depth analysis and unique perspective on the latest releases. With a background in film studies, she provides engaging and informative reviews, and keeps readers up to date with industry trends and emerging talents.