Based on Celeste Ng's 2017 bestseller, "Little Fires Everywhere" follows the intertwined fates of the picture-perfect Richardson family and the enigmatic mother and daughter who upend their ... Read allBased on Celeste Ng's 2017 bestseller, "Little Fires Everywhere" follows the intertwined fates of the picture-perfect Richardson family and the enigmatic mother and daughter who upend their lives.Based on Celeste Ng's 2017 bestseller, "Little Fires Everywhere" follows the intertwined fates of the picture-perfect Richardson family and the enigmatic mother and daughter who upend their lives.
- Nominated for 5 Primetime Emmys
- 4 wins & 31 nominations total
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I watched the full series and thought it was very well written and captivating. The cast was excellent in portraying the characters, too ...all except for Kerry Washington.
I came here to the reviews after finishing the series and am reading that many other people thought the same.
She has this tendency toward facial over-acting that really distracts from her scenes.
It has nothing to do with Kerry's features... she is objectively a very beautiful woman.
But she has absolutely NO RANGE in her acting. She has like two emotions in the entire series.
Somehow in her career, she must have begun to rely on this tic of emoting through her face in the same twitchy/lip quivering/ 'about to cry wobbly chin face' way every time (not specific to the scene/the character). I've seen her do it throughout her work.
(It must be like when you learn to play the guitar with bad habits, and it's even harder to 'unlearn' those habits and relearn to play without those bad habits, than it would have been to just learn to play correctly from the beginning. Those habits somehow become second nature and you rely on it, even though it's not helping you be a better guitar player. It limits you. Hope that analogy makes sense here!)
In this series - Kerry's acting ability is in stark contrast to Reese, who is actually a phenomenal actor in this, and you can clearly see the arc of her character as the episodes progress. She took the Elena character all the way through. She changed from beginning to end. She behaved differently in different scenes, with different characters. That's acting. With Kerry, it's as though she's 'acting' like she's acting. When the scenes call for her to show emotion, here come the overly done facial expressions and twitches! Same, every time.
When you watch Kerry in interviews, she doesn't do it. It's part of her acting persona.
She leans on it SO much in her work (probably unconsciously). So much so, that she delivers an unnecessary display of useless emotions that don't track with the moment in the scene.
And why does she need to be teary eyed in every other scene? Her expressions many times are just not making sense.
She just has no range in her acting and relies on this 'facial expression' tic with the twitchiness over and over again, no matter what.
Seems like my experience was the same as many here who have already commented.... the series was excellent but Kerry Washington's scenes became absolutely cringe worthy and distracting, which took away from the quality of the show.
I came here to the reviews after finishing the series and am reading that many other people thought the same.
She has this tendency toward facial over-acting that really distracts from her scenes.
It has nothing to do with Kerry's features... she is objectively a very beautiful woman.
But she has absolutely NO RANGE in her acting. She has like two emotions in the entire series.
Somehow in her career, she must have begun to rely on this tic of emoting through her face in the same twitchy/lip quivering/ 'about to cry wobbly chin face' way every time (not specific to the scene/the character). I've seen her do it throughout her work.
(It must be like when you learn to play the guitar with bad habits, and it's even harder to 'unlearn' those habits and relearn to play without those bad habits, than it would have been to just learn to play correctly from the beginning. Those habits somehow become second nature and you rely on it, even though it's not helping you be a better guitar player. It limits you. Hope that analogy makes sense here!)
In this series - Kerry's acting ability is in stark contrast to Reese, who is actually a phenomenal actor in this, and you can clearly see the arc of her character as the episodes progress. She took the Elena character all the way through. She changed from beginning to end. She behaved differently in different scenes, with different characters. That's acting. With Kerry, it's as though she's 'acting' like she's acting. When the scenes call for her to show emotion, here come the overly done facial expressions and twitches! Same, every time.
When you watch Kerry in interviews, she doesn't do it. It's part of her acting persona.
She leans on it SO much in her work (probably unconsciously). So much so, that she delivers an unnecessary display of useless emotions that don't track with the moment in the scene.
And why does she need to be teary eyed in every other scene? Her expressions many times are just not making sense.
She just has no range in her acting and relies on this 'facial expression' tic with the twitchiness over and over again, no matter what.
Seems like my experience was the same as many here who have already commented.... the series was excellent but Kerry Washington's scenes became absolutely cringe worthy and distracting, which took away from the quality of the show.
Awed by the performances of the actors who play the younger versions of the leads. The way they catch the expressions and nuances of Reese, Washington and Dewitt is just perfection.
With just 3 episodes completed so far I am writing this review because there have been some consistent things. 1) Kerry Washington is really hard to watch. She only seems to have emotional extremes and it really makes you wonder how no one has ever coached her on subtle acting. 2) Reese Witherspoon is basically the exact same mom from Big Little Lies but now in a different show. 3) The child/teenage actors are actually all pretty good so far. I think the plot is developing nicely and has been pretty in-line with the book so far. Looking forward to seeing more. Sorry for you Scandal lovers but Miss Washington is tough for me
I am liking this tv show . Witherspoon as always exceptional even her husband whoever that guy is but Mia... i am sorry her acting is below par!!! Her expressions at times are just not making sense. Turns me off!
The series is pretty good. Most of the actors are spot on, all the kids are wonderful. The writing is decent and direction impactful. They have really captured the 90s well. The only failing of the show is casting two terribly wrong actors for perhaps the most important characters as its with them the story moves forward. This is the worst of Kerry Washington and Huang Lu hasn't done justice to her role either. Kw seems to have perfected her trembling and making that one annoying af face in the mirror, and no matter what the situation, she pulls the same trick out.. every show, every character, no exceptions. She is deeply unlikable as Mia and so you just can't root for her character. The producers really did drop the ball with casting someone with such limited emotional range. If you can ignore her atrocious presence, the series itself is pretty decent. On the bright side, Lexie Underwood as pearl is pitch perfect. What a bright star!!
Did you know
- TriviaIn the Celeste Ng's source novel , Ng kept Mia Warren's race deliberately vague and undefined. With the casting of Kerry Washington in the Mia Warren role in this adaptation, Warren became a black character. During an April 2020 interview with Terry Gross on the National Public Radio program "Fresh Air," Washington said, "when I met Celeste Ng, the writer, for the first time, she actually admitted to me that she had always thought of Mia as a woman of color, and that she had been drawn to the idea of writing Mia as a black woman. But she didn't feel like she had the authoritative voice to do that in the right way. And so she was kind of vague about her race in the novel. So it was exciting that we were in step with Celeste in diving into the places where she wanted to to grow out the book in ways that already lived in her."
- ConnectionsFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Episode #3.112 (2020)
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