Frank Underwood flips the Founding Fathers the bird in a consequential episode of House of Cards.
If there’s any episode of House of Cards meant to rid one of the delusion of a fair and equal democracy — it’s this one.
On the eve of House of Cards' election, one cannot help but wonder, is it out with the old and in with the new?
It might be Halloween on House of Cards but there are more frightening things in the White House than imagined ghouls and goblins.
House of Cards returns for season five. But can the first episode – even with all its lies and deception – hold a candle to real life politics?
Chapter 52 reveals that the loaded term "terrorism" is now fully entrenched in the minds and actions of the Underwoods.
Chapter 51 is a setup episode. The cards are precariously perched, awaiting even the slightest puff of air to bring them all fluttering down, and like Tom Yates says, many are girding themselves for tragedy.
Love is in the air in an unusually romantic episode of House of Cards.
If there’s anything we know about how the dead function in the beige and black hued world of House of Cards, it's that no death is wasted.
The Democratic National Convention is in full swing, but is it all just a ruse by the man behind the curtain?