Small Town, Big Story
- Série télévisée
- 2025
- 46min
Une production hollywoodienne débarque dans une petite ville irlandaise et met en lumière un secret gardé secret depuis la veille du millénaire.Une production hollywoodienne débarque dans une petite ville irlandaise et met en lumière un secret gardé secret depuis la veille du millénaire.Une production hollywoodienne débarque dans une petite ville irlandaise et met en lumière un secret gardé secret depuis la veille du millénaire.
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Title: "Small Town Big Story"
Genre: Comedy (allegedly)
Review: Welcome to "Small Town Big Story," the TV series that promises to be a comedy but delivers anything but laughs. This show is a masterclass in how not to make people laugh, and it does so with such dedication that you almost have to admire it. Almost.
Let's start with the premise. Ah, the premise. It's as cliché as they come. Picture this: a woman returns to her native Ireland with money to make a movie in a small town that includes her ex and a group of quirky friends, navigating the ups and downs of life with a series of wacky misadventures. Sounds familiar? That's because it is. It's been done a million times before, and "Small Town Big Story" brings absolutely nothing new to the table. It's like the writer took a checklist of every overused sitcom trope and decided to cram them all into one show.
Now, onto the so-called jokes. If you can call them that. The joke deliveries in "Small Town Big Story" are so terrible that they make dad jokes look like comedic gold. The punchlines are predictable, the timing is off, and the humor is so forced that you can practically hear the writer straining to be funny. It's like watching a stand-up comedian bomb on stage, but instead of feeling sympathy, you just feel annoyed.
The camera work is another highlight of this disaster. Or rather, the lack of consistency in the camera work. One moment, you're treated to a close-up of a character's face, and the next, the camera is zooming out so far that you can barely see what's happening. It's as if the cameraman was having a bad day and decided to take it out on the viewers. The result is a visual mess that leaves you feeling dizzy and disoriented.
And then there's the acting. Or should I say, the lack of acting. The performances in "Small Town Big Story" are so thoughtless that you wonder if the actors were even trying. The characters are unbelievable, and not in a good way. They lack depth, personality, and any semblance of relatability. It's like watching cardboard cutouts recite lines with all the enthusiasm of a sloth on a lazy Sunday.
The plot, if you can call it that, goes round and round and gets nowhere. There's no sense of progression or development, and by the end of the first episode, you're left wondering why you wasted your time watching it in the first place.
But perhaps the most disappointing aspect of "Small Town Big Story" is the fact that it was written, directed, and produced by a man who was once a very funny actor. It's like watching a once-great comedian lose their touch and desperately try to recapture their former glory. Unfortunately, the result is a show that falls flat on its face and leaves you cringing in embarrassment.
In conclusion, "Small Town Big Story" is a comedy that fails to deliver on its promise of laughs. With a cliché premise, terrible joke deliveries, inconsistent camera work, thoughtless acting, unbelievable characters, and a plot that goes nowhere, it's a show that should be avoided at all costs. Save yourself the time and find something else to watch. Trust me, you'll thank me later.
😊
Review: Welcome to "Small Town Big Story," the TV series that promises to be a comedy but delivers anything but laughs. This show is a masterclass in how not to make people laugh, and it does so with such dedication that you almost have to admire it. Almost.
Let's start with the premise. Ah, the premise. It's as cliché as they come. Picture this: a woman returns to her native Ireland with money to make a movie in a small town that includes her ex and a group of quirky friends, navigating the ups and downs of life with a series of wacky misadventures. Sounds familiar? That's because it is. It's been done a million times before, and "Small Town Big Story" brings absolutely nothing new to the table. It's like the writer took a checklist of every overused sitcom trope and decided to cram them all into one show.
Now, onto the so-called jokes. If you can call them that. The joke deliveries in "Small Town Big Story" are so terrible that they make dad jokes look like comedic gold. The punchlines are predictable, the timing is off, and the humor is so forced that you can practically hear the writer straining to be funny. It's like watching a stand-up comedian bomb on stage, but instead of feeling sympathy, you just feel annoyed.
The camera work is another highlight of this disaster. Or rather, the lack of consistency in the camera work. One moment, you're treated to a close-up of a character's face, and the next, the camera is zooming out so far that you can barely see what's happening. It's as if the cameraman was having a bad day and decided to take it out on the viewers. The result is a visual mess that leaves you feeling dizzy and disoriented.
And then there's the acting. Or should I say, the lack of acting. The performances in "Small Town Big Story" are so thoughtless that you wonder if the actors were even trying. The characters are unbelievable, and not in a good way. They lack depth, personality, and any semblance of relatability. It's like watching cardboard cutouts recite lines with all the enthusiasm of a sloth on a lazy Sunday.
The plot, if you can call it that, goes round and round and gets nowhere. There's no sense of progression or development, and by the end of the first episode, you're left wondering why you wasted your time watching it in the first place.
But perhaps the most disappointing aspect of "Small Town Big Story" is the fact that it was written, directed, and produced by a man who was once a very funny actor. It's like watching a once-great comedian lose their touch and desperately try to recapture their former glory. Unfortunately, the result is a show that falls flat on its face and leaves you cringing in embarrassment.
In conclusion, "Small Town Big Story" is a comedy that fails to deliver on its promise of laughs. With a cliché premise, terrible joke deliveries, inconsistent camera work, thoughtless acting, unbelievable characters, and a plot that goes nowhere, it's a show that should be avoided at all costs. Save yourself the time and find something else to watch. Trust me, you'll thank me later.
😊
What a great show with brilliant Irish humour, really made me laugh. With a super cast. I Really want to see another series please Chris O'Dowd.
Christina Hendricks & Paddy Consadine lead a wonderful all star cast and Chris O'Dowd is also just brilliant and hilarious.
It's a really unusual story line but it really works and the humour and one liners throughout are perfect and the characters who make up the town are just wonderful.
It was refreshing to watch something really different for a change.
I would certainly recommend this and would be delighted to see another series to see how it all develops.
Top marks from me x.
Christina Hendricks & Paddy Consadine lead a wonderful all star cast and Chris O'Dowd is also just brilliant and hilarious.
It's a really unusual story line but it really works and the humour and one liners throughout are perfect and the characters who make up the town are just wonderful.
It was refreshing to watch something really different for a change.
I would certainly recommend this and would be delighted to see another series to see how it all develops.
Top marks from me x.
Small Town, Big Story is a slow burner that never quite finds its spark, at least not early on. I found myself wishing that episode three had been the pilot because it felt like the show was dawdling through its own setup. The premise of a Hollywood producer returning to her small Irish hometown has its charm but the execution is, frankly, a bit muddled. The narrative meanders and takes its time getting to the heart of the story, leaving you wondering if the tension is ever really meant to build up.
The characters are meant to be quirky and full of local charm but they simply do not stick in the mind. Christina Hendricks and Paddy Considine have moments where their past chemistry shows promise yet the overall characterisation feels flat and underdeveloped. It is as if the show is trying to juggle too many ideas at once and, in doing so, loses the thread that might have tied it all together. In the end, if you like a slow-paced tale with a subtle hint of mystery, you might find a few redeeming qualities here. For me, however, it just did not quite hit the mark.
The characters are meant to be quirky and full of local charm but they simply do not stick in the mind. Christina Hendricks and Paddy Considine have moments where their past chemistry shows promise yet the overall characterisation feels flat and underdeveloped. It is as if the show is trying to juggle too many ideas at once and, in doing so, loses the thread that might have tied it all together. In the end, if you like a slow-paced tale with a subtle hint of mystery, you might find a few redeeming qualities here. For me, however, it just did not quite hit the mark.
Christina Hendricks and Paddy Considine are great in this, along with Susan Lynch and other cast members, but the script flatlines and the comedy doesn't quite get there.
O'Dowd's direction and script make it a bit wooden and clunky. You are always waiting for the killer laughs, the key character moments, the unique Irish craic, but it never arrives.
It's watchable, but it will leave you with a sense of unfulfilled potential. Key relationships just take too long to establish, some great character potential is lost because the moment of spark is missing in the script. The actors are forced to act on, dragging out the awkwardness that's not necessarily good for the character, and leaving the viewer frustrated at the missed opportunity to take them further into the storyline.
The cast saved whatever elements of this that made it watchable but they clearly struggled with O'Dowd's flat script.
There just wasn't that link between comedy, plot and irishness that often makes these types of series work.
I think there's an age old lesson that O'Dowd has forgotten here, don't try and do everything yourself. Sometimes you need a critical friend (or two) on the project and this felt that it was the result of nobody being able to say "try that again" to the the ubiquitous O'Dowd.
Maybe a fresh director and a good script adaptation would revive it.
I hope so, there was something in there that O'Dowd just couldn't tease out.
O'Dowd's direction and script make it a bit wooden and clunky. You are always waiting for the killer laughs, the key character moments, the unique Irish craic, but it never arrives.
It's watchable, but it will leave you with a sense of unfulfilled potential. Key relationships just take too long to establish, some great character potential is lost because the moment of spark is missing in the script. The actors are forced to act on, dragging out the awkwardness that's not necessarily good for the character, and leaving the viewer frustrated at the missed opportunity to take them further into the storyline.
The cast saved whatever elements of this that made it watchable but they clearly struggled with O'Dowd's flat script.
There just wasn't that link between comedy, plot and irishness that often makes these types of series work.
I think there's an age old lesson that O'Dowd has forgotten here, don't try and do everything yourself. Sometimes you need a critical friend (or two) on the project and this felt that it was the result of nobody being able to say "try that again" to the the ubiquitous O'Dowd.
Maybe a fresh director and a good script adaptation would revive it.
I hope so, there was something in there that O'Dowd just couldn't tease out.
Hollywood producer Wendy Patterson (Christina Hendricks) goes back home to Drumbán, Ireland which she has picked to shoot a big movie. She has a secret connection to local doctor Séamus Proctor (Paddy Considine) after an incident during the Millennial celebration. She hasn't been back in over 20 years.
Chris O'Dowd is the show creator and has a fun supporting role. It's a little odd that Christina Hendricks is playing a returning local. Most people do return to their old accent, but she's probably not going to do Irish well. She is my main issue with this show. Her character has so much resentment that it's hard to have fun with that. I would rather have someone like Aya Cash who is funny when she's angry. I like Paddy Considine's scared acting. Big Jim McDaid needs to be a little funnier although he does have a nice sweet side. I love what Jemima Rowlands adds to his character. This is mildly fun in an off-centered sci-fi premise.
Chris O'Dowd is the show creator and has a fun supporting role. It's a little odd that Christina Hendricks is playing a returning local. Most people do return to their old accent, but she's probably not going to do Irish well. She is my main issue with this show. Her character has so much resentment that it's hard to have fun with that. I would rather have someone like Aya Cash who is funny when she's angry. I like Paddy Considine's scared acting. Big Jim McDaid needs to be a little funnier although he does have a nice sweet side. I love what Jemima Rowlands adds to his character. This is mildly fun in an off-centered sci-fi premise.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesChristina Hendricks's husband saw a real UFO while shooting the show. It was late at night, and they were waiting for delivery. George offered to wait outside. Hendricks later said: "George comes in and he's white as a ghost and I went what happened he goes you're never going to believe this, I just saw a UFO. And I know this man so well I looked at his face and I am like: 'He saw a UFO.' Wow." He even took a photo of this.
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Détails
- Date de sortie
- Pays d’origine
- Site officiel
- Langue
- Aussi connu sous le nom de
- Маленьке містечко, велика історія
- Lieux de tournage
- Sociétés de production
- Voir plus de crédits d'entreprise sur IMDbPro
- Durée
- 46min
- Couleur
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