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Seth Rogen’s Show Biz Parody The Studio Loves Movies More Than It Hates Hollywood

Seth Rogen’s Show Biz Parody The Studio Loves Movies More Than It Hates Hollywood
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The Studio’s camera never stops moving. Apple’s new show biz satire captures the stress and chaos of movie-making by almost never taking a second to catch its breath. As Seth Rogen’s harried new Hollywood studio president, eternally torn between wanting to make art and needing to make hits, regularly throws gas on the various fires he’s tasked with putting out, the camera always weaves and sweeps around him while a percussion-heavy jazz score clatters and bangs on the soundtrack. (If you couldn’t already tell The Studio was a show biz satire, the clattering and banging of that percussion-heavy jazz score would be enough to clue you in; they’re apparently mandatory for this type of thing.) An entire episode might have only one or two edits, and the second episode, “The Oner,” blatantly calls attention to this affectation; it’s a one-shot episode about the filming of a one-shot movie scene. The music’s stressful, the tension’s always escalating, and there’s hardly ever any release through editing, and although this is all very showy and ostentatious, there’s also a point to all of it. The Studio’s chaotic structure formally reflects the mental state of its lead character, who dominates the show as much as Larry David does Curb Your Enthusiasm—a comedy that The Studio often resembles.

If the cliche is accurate, Hollywood studios love influence math—when a pitch can be summed up as one popular property plus another popular property. The Studio has the show biz intrigue (and tracking shot) of The Player, the frantic music of Birdman, and the cringe comedy of Curb Your Enthusiasm. It also has an amazing cast—most of whom are barely in it. And in Rogen it has a great comedian to build around—although one whose strengths aren’t a good fit for truly incisive, cynical satire.

Rogen’s charm has always been tied to his affable everyman stature. He’s legitimately funny but also fundamentally seems like a nice guy, somebody you could hang out with and be friends with in real life. That likability resurfaces in Continental Studios head Matt Remick, his Studio character, which softens the show’s tone. The Studio squarely targets the entertainment industry (the closest thing it has to a season-long story is Continental trying to make a movie about Kool-Aid), and Remick routinely embarrasses himself as much as Larry does in Curb, but Remick largely remains an amiable, sympathetic character, and outside of Bryan Cranston’s guest role as a slimy CEO, the show is never quite as critical of Hollywood as you might expect. The problems Matt faces (and causes) are rooted in the business itself and the compromises he’s compelled to make in hopes of succeeding in it more than they are with him or his personality, and art can still happen in spite of studio interference. Matt doesn’t want to make a Kool-Aid movie, we know he doesn’t want to make a Kool-Aid movie, and yet he crumbles immediately and starts making a Kool-Aid movie because Kool-Aid’s Q score is through the roof and making money is the only way to keep his job. Don’t expect a satire as dark as The Player, where the surest path to success is having no morals or scruples, and where everybody, even the artists, will sell out their convictions in an instant; The Studio criticizes the business, and has no problem making Remick into a cringe-worthy fool, but his flaws are closer to Michael Scott’s thoughtlessness than the cruelty and cravenness of David Brent. 

The Studio’s insistence on making its characters broadly likable extends beyond Rogen’s lead. Ike Barinholtz plays another Continental exec, Sal Seperstein, who, in the first episode, seems positioned to be Matt’s rival. Instead he almost immediately gets over his disappointment about losing the top job to Matt and remains a good, loyal friend to his new boss. Despite his flashy, Hollywood bro tendencies—he’s a glad-handing cheese ball with a coke habit—Sal’s pretty much a good guy, Matt’s comic sidekick who also serves as a slightly less embarrassing counterpoint to Matt’s cringiest behavior. Barinholtz is also the only cast member beyond Rogen to really get a substantial amount of screen time over the first season, and that points to what might be The Studio’s biggest problem: it just doesn’t use the rest of its cast enough.

That really stands out with Kathryn Hahn and Catherine O’Hara—one of the funniest stars of the last 15 years and a true comedy legend, respectively. Both their characters disappear for several episodes in a row, and are never really central to the ones they’re in. Perhaps that’s the price of a genuine all-star cast; maybe the always-busy Hahn and O’Hara had other projects shooting concurrently that limited their time on The Studio. But it’s disappointing to expect Hahn in a main role only to realize eight episodes in that you know almost nothing about her character beyond the sight gag of her dressing 20 years younger than her age. O’Hara gets a little bit more to do as Continental’s previous studio head, who sticks around with a cushy production deal extracted from a desperate and pathetic Matt; she might get more screen time and character development than Hahn, but O’Hara still only pops up periodically throughout the show’s 10 episodes. (The other full-time cast member, Chase Sui Wonders as Matt’s assistant-turned-junior executive, more than holds her own in a role that gets more to do, but not much.) 

Hahn and O’Hara’s characters are less important to the show than the constant procession of celebrity cameos in every episode. Cameos are expected in a Hollywood satire, of course, and The Studio again channels The Player by embracing a “more-is-more” approach to them. The very first actor you see on screen is Paul Dano, playing himself on the set of a movie Matt’s producing. Martin Scorsese has a major role in that first episode, and in what should be no surprise to anybody who’s seen one of his acting roles before, he’s really good at comedy. An episode set at the Golden Globes brings a flood of cameos from famous actors and obscure writers and show creators alike. Olivia Wilde, Charlize Theron, Greta Lee, Sarah Polley (as the director trying to get that one-shot), Zac Efron, Ron Howard, Anthony Mackie, Hacks creators Jen Statsky and Paul W. Downs, and several others show up as themselves throughout the season, making The Studio’s version of Hollywood closely resemble the real one. In a sign of the show’s consistent level of quality, pretty much all of these cameos work; they’re almost always funny, and usually add to the story instead of distracting from it. They underline what The Studio really is at its core: a funny, generally good-natured, not particularly biting send-up of the movie business.

In a more cynical parody, The Studio’s central struggle between art and commerce would be definitely settled within the first few minutes of the first season. In the hands of, say, the writers of Veep, the head of The Studio wouldn’t be a true cineaste selling himself out to make a living, but a David Zaslav-style slop merchant with open contempt for art and his own studio’s history. But ultimately Matt—and The Studio—loves movies too much to truly hate Hollywood. That defangs The Studio and makes it feel immediately out-of-date; actual Hollywood is far more cavalier and shameless than anything in this show. It’s not great satire, but it’s a well-made, likable, genuinely funny show best suited for show biz junkies who love Hollywood no matter how much they might complain about it. It might be weird for a new show in 2025 to have a target audience of 1990s Entertainment Weekly subscribers, but at least The Studio is good at what it does.

The first two episodes of The Studio are now streaming on Apple TV+. A new episode premieres every Wednesday through May 21.


Senior editor Garrett Martin writes about videogames, TV, travel, theme parks, wrestling, music, and more. You can also find him on Blue Sky.

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