Toby Fleishman sabía qué esperar cuando él y su esposa de casi 15 años se separaron: tensión en sus negociaciones de crianza compartida.Toby Fleishman sabía qué esperar cuando él y su esposa de casi 15 años se separaron: tensión en sus negociaciones de crianza compartida.Toby Fleishman sabía qué esperar cuando él y su esposa de casi 15 años se separaron: tensión en sus negociaciones de crianza compartida.
- Nominado a 7 premios Primetime Emmy
- 2 premios ganados y 19 nominaciones en total
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I've seen a lot of the bad reviews and not to sound too moldy but I get the feeling it's the younger folks. Us olds in our 30s and 40s get the neverending question of what if? Which is why I think you need to be a little seasoned to truly enjoy this series. You needed to have lived life and gone through things to take in all this show is giving. Missing your youth, your freedom and possibilities. Being the age where you are too young to stop dreaming but too old to begin again. Wondering if you've chosen the right path, right career, right spouse, or if you were meant to be a parent. You're missing old friends, old neighborhoods, and old apartments. The writing in this show is nothing short of amazing and completely captures the thoughts spiraling in every mind of a millennial/gen x adult.
10mrfrane
There are legitimate complaints in the reviews about how much the story revolves around Fleishman, the man in the divorce. But it's a story that unfolds over time. There are multiple characters at the core of the story and they each have arcs to play out. I, for one, was fascinated to see how my perspective changed as each episode played out and the point of view shifted, and there were revelations. Oh, boy, were there revelations.
Put it this way, whoever produced this program did not spend all that money on Claire Danes to have her be defined by everyone else. And keep an eye on Meara Mahoney Gross, who plays the Fleishmans' young daughter.
Put it this way, whoever produced this program did not spend all that money on Claire Danes to have her be defined by everyone else. And keep an eye on Meara Mahoney Gross, who plays the Fleishmans' young daughter.
After a clunky first episode (I'd give it a 6/10), the thing that keeps impressing me about this series is that it presents everything both subjectively but fairly. Characters that were introduced as one dimensional, eventually get their due. Some of them are very unlikable, they are all flawed as hell, but that's what makes this series worthwhile. Its not a bunch of paragons you can't relate to. We are all flawed people, and letting yourself root for them despite that provides a self-reflective catharsis.
Jesse Eisenberg turns in a good, but not boundary stretching performance. Claire Danes provides a sympathetic villain. And the writing is very good, but IMHO doesn't quite get men right (but it's very close).
Jesse Eisenberg turns in a good, but not boundary stretching performance. Claire Danes provides a sympathetic villain. And the writing is very good, but IMHO doesn't quite get men right (but it's very close).
I started watching this because I love Claire Danes. After a couple episodes, I was ready to give it up: the episodes were meandering and mediocre, at best, and Danes was barely even in it. Then, I saw someone mention episode 7 and how amazing Danes' performance was. I decided to persevere.
The first six episodes were quite a slog of upper middle class navel gazing. I kept wondering what purpose the story really served. Did we really need to know about these people and their boring, privileged lives? I think that it was well acted, but the focus on Toby seemed a poor choice: he was the least interesting character in the series, to me. Episode 6 picked up a little, so I was hopeful about episodes 7 & 8.
Episode 7 was one of, if not the, best hours of television I've watched this year. Claire Danes was riveting. I related so much to her character. Just phenomenal. Episode 8, which focused on Libby was also very, very good. Both episodes together were a profoundly moving look at middle age for us younger Gen Xers.
I really wish the first 6 episodes had been condensed into 3. I also think Claire Danes and Adam Brody were criminally underutilized. If you can slog through the start, the payoff of episodes 7 & 8 is worth it.
The first six episodes were quite a slog of upper middle class navel gazing. I kept wondering what purpose the story really served. Did we really need to know about these people and their boring, privileged lives? I think that it was well acted, but the focus on Toby seemed a poor choice: he was the least interesting character in the series, to me. Episode 6 picked up a little, so I was hopeful about episodes 7 & 8.
Episode 7 was one of, if not the, best hours of television I've watched this year. Claire Danes was riveting. I related so much to her character. Just phenomenal. Episode 8, which focused on Libby was also very, very good. Both episodes together were a profoundly moving look at middle age for us younger Gen Xers.
I really wish the first 6 episodes had been condensed into 3. I also think Claire Danes and Adam Brody were criminally underutilized. If you can slog through the start, the payoff of episodes 7 & 8 is worth it.
... there's a review by Sophie Brookover in Vulture of episode three that dutifully-perfectly summarizes the series to date... what's going to happen from-after this 3rd episode will take the script and lives of its characters in a definitely different direction
... they would both be very difficult people to form partnerships together, so relentless and specific what they're wanting for their lives and those around them... the acting is magnificent by all the characters in this show, and they are most hard to like... knowing where this is all heading takes absolutely nothing away from interest of all the details of them getting there... not liking them not lessening the pains watching the journey.
... they would both be very difficult people to form partnerships together, so relentless and specific what they're wanting for their lives and those around them... the acting is magnificent by all the characters in this show, and they are most hard to like... knowing where this is all heading takes absolutely nothing away from interest of all the details of them getting there... not liking them not lessening the pains watching the journey.
¿Sabías que…?
- TriviaDuring a January 2023 interview with Tonya Mosley on the National Public Radio program Fresh Air, Taffy Brodesser-Akner confirmed that many of the main cast members were chosen at least partly because they were actors who had been well-known as teens and who were now middle-aged: "It was so intentional. It was--you know, there was this idea that these actors were too young to play these roles. I mean, Jesse Eisenberg, when we started talking about the adaptation, was only 36 years old. Luckily--and I mean that facetiously--the pandemic came along, and by the time. . . . [filming started, he was] 38--so we were able to rationalize that. But we had these choices. Did we want to cast people who were older who we could then look at as in a more authentic crisis of middle age? But the point of the book and the show are the beginnings of those crises. And also, this allowed us to have them play themselves in flashbacks. But most of all . . . if I don't, as a 40-year-old, yet understand what is happening to me in my life, the idea that Jesse Eisenberg--yes, from The Squid And The Whale, yes, from The Social Network--that it's happening to him, too, that it's happening to Claire Danes from My So-Called Life, that it's happening to--oh, my gosh--to Adam Brody [from The O.C.], to Lizzy Caplan [from Mean Girls], to Josh Radnor--all these people that we knew so well as very, very young people. It hits home for me so much to say, oh, my God, this is a force you cannot fight--if you're lucky. If you're lucky and you get to live, this is a force that you won't be able to fight. We're all going to get old."
- ConexionesFeatured in Half in the Bag: 2022 Catch-up Part 2 (2023)
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- Fleishman Is in Trouble
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- Tiempo de ejecución
- 48min
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