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Happy Face is surprisingly more accurate than fictional ... reminding the other characters and the audience of who he is. During some of the tense scenes, you forget about the actor behind ...
Saloni Gajjar (The A.V. Club): "The show pushes hard for the audience to feel a certain way but only effectively does so in a few scenes with honesty." Keeley Brooks (Loud and Clear Reviews ...
While criticized for melodrama and pacing, Happy Face has maintained audience interest. IMDb user reviews point to its "gripping" mystery and Dennis Quaid's "uncomfortable" performance as Keith ...
On the surface, Happy Face is awash in protestations regarding ... It derides shows like Dr. Greg, which offer soulless catharsis to an audience that really just wants to wallow in inhumanity ...
The conclusion of Happy Face Episode 5, titled Don't Dream ... holding a press conference, in which the audience anticipates Elijah's acquittal based on new evidence. However, rather than ...
This, in turn, led him to be dubbed the "Happy Face Killer," a label that proved convenient in true crime circles, where names like "The Golden State Killer," "The Night Stalker," and "B.T.K ...
The horrors surrounding "Happy Face" are bone-chillingly true. The Paramount+ crime drama series delves into the seemingly all-American upbringing of Melissa G. Moore, which is terrifyingly ...
In the new Paramount+ series “Happy Face,” Dennis Quaid plays real-life serial killer Keith Hunter Jesperson. Jesperson became known as the Happy Face Killer because he drew smiley faces on ...