Now Apocalypse is an American comedy television series that aired for one season of ten episodes from March 10 to May 12, 2019, on Starz. The series was written by Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino. Araki also was director and executive producer alongside Steven Soderbergh and Gregory Jacobs. Starz canceled the series after one season on July 26, 2019.
Premise
Ulysses, his friends Carly and Ford, and Ford's girlfriend Severine navigate love, sex, and fame in Los Angeles. Troubled by sinister, premonitory dreams, Ulysses wonders if the end of the world as we know it is coming, or if he is simply suffering some kind of marijuana-fueled delusions.
Kelli Berglund as Carly Carlson, the best friend of Ulysses, who also happens to be a struggling actress and cam girl. According to Uly, Carly also suffers from anxiety.
Beau Mirchoff as Ford Halstead, Ulysses' straight roommate
Ulysses finally meets Gabriel, the attractive guy he has been texting. They hook up in an alley, and are both affected by the encounter. Online sex worker Carly is bored with Jethro, the actor she is dating. Aspiring screenwriter Ford is approached by a producer, Barnabas. He wants to be exclusive with astrobiological theorist Severine, but she prefers an open relationship. Ulysses finds himself at the scene of his recurring nightmare, in which a homeless man is being raped by a reptilian alien.
2
"Where Is My Mind?"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Trying to make sense of his vision, Ulysses reads about an alleged conspiracy involving reptilian aliens infiltrating Earth society. Barnabas takes Ford to a film premiere, where he meets famed director Otto West. Severine lures Ford into a threesome with Daphne, but Severine prefers to watch. Jethro finds Carly's stash of sex toys, and agrees to let her spank him.
3
"The Rules of Attraction"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Ulysses is bewildered by Gabriel's disappearance. Otto convinces Ford to pose for him. Severine's investigation continues. Carly's acting teacher Frank comes on to her. Ford is upset when Severine has sex with her ex, Mustafa. Ulysses gets a middle-of-the-night text from Gabriel, and reluctantly agrees to meet him.
4
"The Downward Spiral"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Ulysses has sex with a straight, married delivery guy. Ford takes Ulysses to a men's support group. Severine suspects she is being watched and followed. Carly interviews new roommates. Ford tells Severine that he was upset when she slept with Mustafa, and she suggests that they try only having sex with other people together.
5
"Stranger Than Paradise"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Ford takes Severine, Ulysses, and Carly to a lavish celebrity party in Palm Springs. Ulysses has brusque encounter alien conspiracy theorist Mitchell Kent. Severine rushes back to LA for a work emergency. Carly is attracted to Leif, a sculptural artist with cerebral palsy, but resists having sex with him because of Jethro. Ulysses has sex with a waitress from the party. When a despondent Ford passes out, Ulysses catches Barnabas molesting him.
6
"She's Lost Control"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Ulysses helps Carly shoot her web series, Sluts. Ford is unhappy that Severine is spending so much time at work. Carly's agent drops her. Ford explodes when Ulysses warns him about Barnabas and Otto.
7
"Anywhere Out of the World"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Severine takes Ford to a lavish sex party. Ford is horrified to discover that Otto has used his photos for underwear ads plastered all over LA. Ulysses is smitten with social worker Isaac.
8
"Unknown Pleasures"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Carly takes Jethro to a BDSM club. Severine surprises Ford by arranging a threesome with a man he said was attractive, but Ford cannot go through with it. Ulysses and Isaac are very into each other.
9
"Disappear Here"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Isaac tells Ulysses about an increasing epidemic among the local homeless population in which they have delusions of being sexually assaulted by aliens. Carly runs into Leif, the guy who tempted her in Palm Springs. As they have frozen yogurt together after their exercises in the park, they begin discussing what counts as cheating on someone since Carly is still with her boyfriend Jethro. But unfortunately during the conversation, the subject matter causes Carly to have an anxiety attack so Leif tries to help her. Once she relaxes, Carly reveals to Leif that the talk of cheating made her feel quite unusually anxious. Ulysses and Isaac officially become boyfriends, and Isaac gives Ulysses a key to his apartment. Ford is upset when Severine is summoned to Roswell, New Mexico indefinitely for work. Jethro discovers Carly's side job as a camgirl when he inadvertently solicits her on the website. As Ford rips up the phone number he received from another woman, Severine has a threesome with her twin coworkers, Lars and Klaus.
10
"Everything Is Gone Forever"
Gregg Araki
Story by : Gregg Araki Teleplay by : Gregg Araki and Karley Sciortino
Ulysses's relationship with Isaac implodes when Isaac learns about his intense past connection with Gabriel. Carly and Jethro argue about her cam job. Ford is devastated when Severine breaks things off with him, and is unwilling to have sex with another woman, Cleopatra. Carly takes a meeting with a producer who turns out to be one of her cam clients. Ulysses questions the homeless man from his dreams, who claims to have been repeatedly raped by aliens. He admits that "about six months later, the babies come out", and begs Ulysses to kill him. He refuses, but the man is electrocuted anyway by a live wire. Ford wakes up to find Cleopatra in his bedroom. Gabriel reappears to Ulysses. Carly breaks up with a drunken Jethro, who is subsequently raped by an alien.
Production
Development
Gregg Araki was inspired to do television by the mystery series Twin Peaks, which he called "so ground-breaking and artistic and unusual and just its totally own thing". He directed episodes of several television series, but was hesitant to run his own show until he thought about the story potential of life in Los Angeles. Araki presented the idea to writer Karley Sciortino, who started working with him on the script. Gregory Jacobs, who had worked with Araki on Red Oaks, joined the project and brought in Steven Soderbergh. The production designer, costume designer, and director of photography have previously worked on other projects with Araki.[11]
On March 26, 2018, it was announced that Starz had given Now Apocalypse a series order for a first season of ten episodes. The series is written by Araki and Sciortino, and directed by Araki. The series is executive produced by Soderbergh, Jacobs, and Araki.[12][13][14][15][16][17] On December 10, 2018, it was announced that the series would premiere on March 10, 2019.[18] On March 22, 2019, the eight remaining episodes of season one were released online and on demand. They also continued to air weekly.[19]
Starz canceled the series after one season on July 26, 2019.[20] Araki later stated that he was shopping the series to other networks.[21]
The ten episodes of the series were shot in 40 days.[30]
Reception
Critical response
On Rotten Tomatoes the series holds an approval rating of 78% based on 32 reviews, with an average score of 6.42 out of 10. The website's critical consensus reads: "Marrying filmmaker Gregg Araki's frisky style with heady conspiracies and literary allusions, Now Apocalypse's bodacious aesthetics and philosophical pondering may prove too deliberately offbeat and garish for some."[31]Metacritic assigned the series a weighted average score of 64 out of 100 based on 12 critics, indicating "generally favorable reviews".[32]
Ratings
Viewership and ratings per episode of Now Apocalypse