In the golden age of "prestige TV," shows often compete to be the darkest, the most complex, or the most cinematic. But in 2013, Netflix released a show that seemed, on its surface, deceptively simple: a privileged blonde woman goes to a minimum-security federal prison for a decade-old drug smuggling crime. That show, Orange Is the New Black (OITNB), quickly revealed itself to be not just a prison dramedy, but a sprawling, kaleidoscopic epic about systemic injustice, the nature of friendship, and the indomitable, messy will to survive.
Orange Is the New Black will make you angry. It will make you laugh. It will break your heart. And by the time you finish the final season, staring at a chain-link fence as the camera pulls away, you will miss these women like they were your own cellmates. nonton film orange is the new black
To call Orange Is the New Black a "must-watch" is an understatement. It is a cultural landmark that changed how streaming originals were made. But more than that, seven seasons and 91 episodes later, it remains one of the most emotionally devastating and unexpectedly hilarious shows ever produced. The show begins with Piper Chapman (Taylor Schilling), a Brooklyn-based entrepreneur and fiancée to the adorably bland Larry (Jason Biggs). Her perfect life is upended when she is sentenced to 15 months at Litchfield Penitentiary for transporting a suitcase of drug money for her ex-girlfriend, Alex Vause (Laura Prepon), a glamorous, sharp-tongued international drug smuggler. In the golden age of "prestige TV," shows