Louie

Louie

2010
Louie
Louie

Louie

8.5 | TV-MA | en | Drama

Louis C.K. stars as a fictionalized version of himself; a comedian and newly divorced father raising his two daughters in New York City.

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Seasons & Episodes

5
4
3
2
1
0
EP1  Pot Luck
Apr. 09,2015
Pot Luck

Louie goes to a potluck dinner.

EP2  A La Carte
Apr. 16,2015
A La Carte

Louie hosts an open mike.

EP3  Cop Story
Apr. 23,2015
Cop Story

Louie runs into an old acquaintance.

EP4  Bobby's House
Apr. 30,2015
Bobby's House

Louie is invited to go to a wake with his brother, Bobby; Louie gets injured in the street by a woman; Pamela has to give Louie a makeover in order to mask his injuries so he can perform.

EP5  Untitled
May. 07,2015
Untitled

Jane visits the doctor.

EP6  Sleepover
May. 14,2015
Sleepover

Jane has some friends over.

EP7  The Road (1)
May. 21,2015
The Road (1)

Louie goes on the road.

EP8  The Road (2)
May. 28,2015
The Road (2)

Louie continues his work on the road.

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8.5 | TV-MA | en | Drama , Comedy | More Info
Released: 2010-06-29 | Released Producted By: 3 Arts Entertainment , FX Productions Country: United States of America Budget: 0 Revenue: 0 Official Website:
info

Louis C.K. stars as a fictionalized version of himself; a comedian and newly divorced father raising his two daughters in New York City.

Genre

Drama , Comedy

Watch Online

Louie (2010) is currently not available on any services.

Cast

Louis C.K. , Pamela Adlon , Hadley Delany , Ursula Parker

Director

Amy Beth Silver

Producted By

3 Arts Entertainment , FX Productions

Louie Videos and Images

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Louie Audience Reviews

Interesteg What makes it different from others?
Laikals The greatest movie ever made..!
Ketrivie It isn't all that great, actually. Really cheesy and very predicable of how certain scenes are gonna turn play out. However, I guess that's the charm of it all, because I would consider this one of my guilty pleasures.
FirstWitch A movie that not only functions as a solid scarefest but a razor-sharp satire.
Goalie Dave I have never before gone from loving a show to so completely hating it. After the first 3 seasons I was really looking forward to season 4. After season 4 I was disappointed but then I thought - everyone's entitled to an off show or an off season. So when season 5 came along I thought that I would give Louie another chance. But after watching season 5 episode 1 I am done with Louie. Firstly this is not a comedy - that's okay but people should know that going in. It's not only not a comedy it's downright depressing. Every episode seems to be an excuse to portray how twisted Louie's experience with other people, especially women is. There is not one likable character in Louie including Louie himself. They're not even particularly interesting people because I simply can't relate to these repressed, narcissistic New Yorkers. And this is all coming from a guy who loves Louis CK's stand up, his interviews on Stern and the first 3 seasons of Louie. I would watch S5E2 but I have no hope that this gets any better and I just can't bear the thought of spending 22 more minutes inside Louie's sick, sad mind.
kofila Louie is in one word ingenious. The way Louis CK works with the format and the possibilities of television show are extraordinary and makes you revalue everything you have seen before it.The imagination and creativity behind, almost move me to tears. You can feel the love for the craft put into it and the wonderful acting and clever, funny, writing. The casting is simply magnificent...Louis CK experiments with crossing genres in the most fascinating way. Changing the pace and atmosphere of the show from situation comedy, to beautiful love story then to grasping teen drama... I can not even tell, how much I value this project and for me it will always be one of the best things I have ever seen.
Justin Sherman The subway rattles through its motions, and Louie sits aboard, watching along with several other disturbed passengers a strange brown fluid lapping a precarious tide against the sides of a depressed seat-cushion. No one in the car wants to guess what the fluid is, everyone is grossed out by it, no one acts. Cut to black and white, as an inspiring tune akin to a tender moment from A Beautiful Mind begins to play in the background, and Louie, giving his head a shake, presses up onto his feet. Wide-eyed his fellow occupants of the subway car watch as, in slow and deliberate selflessness, Louie strikes off his long-sleeved sweater, kneels down, and mops up the strange brown substance... soaking the offending fluid up and out of their hearts. As he rises, martyr and saint, the looks on the subway car turn to glowing smiles of adoration and firm, knowing nods.. old ladies rising to embrace him and young men giving him their applauds. He stirs awake. The fluid is still there. Everyone's still watching it. He gets up and leaves the car. This is Louie. Sometimes it's silly, sometimes it's weird, sometimes it's highly dramatic, but it's richly infused with a dark, grounded, everyman sense of humour... a strange mixture of crushing cynicism and liberating hope. It's so much more than just a sit-com, and is one of the best things on TV today.
Hugo Melo I've always been a fan of stand-up comedy. When done right it can soar beyond the confines of comedy and become an observation and bitting critique on society. Louis C.K.'s stand up does just that. It is not only hilarious but rubs salt into many of society's wounds in a refreshing and brutally frank fashion as it also unconftroubly exposes the fears and hidden desires of many everyday man - from single to married with kids to divorced and back around. Based on the strength of Louis C.K's brilliant stand-up, I expected a great deal from his comedy show. What I got was nothing at all what I expected and the show is all the better for it. I feared that it would perhaps be in the vein of "Curb Your Enthusiasm - which is a brilliant show - but who wants to see the same show again starring a different character? Well, Louie is nothing like any other show I have ever seen, it's a beast of it's own. And beast is a good way to define it. It's brutally honest, uncompromising, crass and very funny, but it is also tender, realistic and poignant. The show's first season was really great, but Season Two elevates the show to an all new level. It becomes more focused, more tightly wound and it's themes are darker than ever. And despite all that, it is still unspeakably funny and bravely experimental, It«'s hability to navigate through the ridiculous and the sublime is awing. Then why four stars and not five? Because despite it's bravery, the show sometimes steers from problematics that were gracefully presented trough the course of one full episode but that get dropped without any explanation or continuity. For example, there is an episode where he buys a house way out of his price range so that his kids have space to play and be generally happier. But that is never brought up again throughout the rest of the series and it was an issue ripe for exploration and further development. In another episode, one of his sisters dump his niece on him and he has to take care of her. Towards the end of the episdoe he is given a piece of information that suggests that he will have to take care of her for a much longer period of time but on the next episode she's gone. These continuity issues where also found in Season One. For example, the actress that plays a woman on a date with Louie during which he is hummiliated and bullyed by a young man is the same actress who plays is mother in another episode of the same season. I know that Louie does it on purpose, as he stated at one point that he did not care for continuity, that he was more concerned with whatever message or laugh a specific episode aimed for, but it does feel like a cop-out sometimes. Continuity issues and occasional cop-outs aside, the show is still an amazing piece of work.