Three suburban couples vacation together each season, but tensions arise when one couple splits up and the husband brings a much younger woman on subsequent trips.Three suburban couples vacation together each season, but tensions arise when one couple splits up and the husband brings a much younger woman on subsequent trips.Three suburban couples vacation together each season, but tensions arise when one couple splits up and the husband brings a much younger woman on subsequent trips.
- Nominated for 1 Primetime Emmy
- 2 wins & 3 nominations total
Browse episodes
Featured reviews
This updated series is an improvement on the original movie. Really hits home for those of us going through many years of marriage. Tine Fey is a great writer and doesn't pull any punches in revealing the challenges of marriage. I loved how the updated series focuses not only on marriage, but friendship and parenthood. Also, there's the fact that not every couple has the same issues or deals with their issues in the same manner. The series is funny and it was very sad also. The ending is unexpected if you saw the original but it's quite griping. I believe if you are 50+, you will be able to see yourself in one of the characters of this series.
I don't really understand a lot of the comments on here, both the ones in favour and against. I enjoyed the show for the most part. It's got an interesting mix of characters, and there's tension because one of the characters decides to leave their wife, which causes mayhem for the group of friends, comprised of three couples. It's not laugh out loud funny but there are plenty of amusing moments, mixed with mostly easy to digest drama. Where it really goes astray however is in the end of the second-last episode and the final episode, when the story takes a twist which just makes the whole show a downer. And totally takes the shine off of it. It wasn't necessary to go this direction at all. Given that the whole series tracks the original film pretty closely, I don't see why they needed to make this particular deviation which took the fun out of the whole thing.
I remember watching the original Alan Alda/Carol Burnett movie when I was younger, finding it amusing. Years later watching this remake, having gone through a divorce myself and realizing how friendship and family dynamics change during and after, I find this comedy to be on point! The storyline is not outlandish, the jokes land well, and the actors really do pull off what appears to be a decades long friendship with occasional speed bumps and misunderstandings.
Do not go looking for high art or deeper meaning. Watching this simply reminded me of my life, my friends, and how we've all changed over the years for better or worse, yet still remain friends.
Do not go looking for high art or deeper meaning. Watching this simply reminded me of my life, my friends, and how we've all changed over the years for better or worse, yet still remain friends.
I'm a gen Xer who watched, and liked, the original Alan Alda movie and it tells you something that the funniest bit in the 3 episodes i have seen is his cameo. This show has a charismatic cast that are let down by a script that simply doesn't quite dare to go where it probably needs to go to be both seriously funny and insightful. It tries, but it just seems a bit scared of itself and every time it goes close it runs away and hides.
A show about long term relationships should offer a fertile ground for both humour and pathos and yet it fails to seriously deliver on both counts. Yes, there are some funny moments...just not quite enough.
A show about long term relationships should offer a fertile ground for both humour and pathos and yet it fails to seriously deliver on both counts. Yes, there are some funny moments...just not quite enough.
Hindsight is always 20/20. Case in point: I was not that huge a fan of the 1981 ensemble comedy upon which this eight-episode 2025 dramedy series is based. Now however, the series made me appreciate Alan Alda's deft touch in maneuvering a beloved veteran cast through the machinations of the often prickly relationships among three middle-aged married couples across four vacations they share over the course of a year. The series follows the same basic storyline, even sharing the names and general personalities of the original characters (except one) and even replicating some of the same comedy gags. In regard to scripting, Tina Fey takes the reins with co-writers Lang Fisher and Tracey Wigfield, and her dry comedy instincts and clever observations are on display here but not always effectively. Not for a lack of effort by the cast, there's a nagging arm's length distance in the way the supposed closeness of the characters is conveyed. Also compromising the dynamics is the lack of equality in the way the couples are presented, for instance, playing the Alda-Carol Burnett couple, Fey as Kate appears far more alpha and nuanced than Will Forte's non-confrontational Jack. In a turn that downplays his comedy chops, Steve Carell soberly plays Nick whose middle-aged frustration triggers the primary storyline where he leaves his wet-blanket wife Anne and connects with a vibrant young dental hygienist, Ginny. The one casting twist is that the third pair has become Danny and Claude, a married gay couple in an open relationship. The opposites-attract dynamic between Colman Domingo's emotionally resistant Danny and Marco Calvani's overly unctuous Claude is similar to the fractious Jack Weston-Rita Moreno pairing but with obvious differences. The most dramatic change from the movie is the expansion of Anne as a plot catalyst. Whereas in the movie, Anne (played by the estimable Sandy Dennis) disappeared in the second vacation and was given a poignant send-off in the third, she is portrayed in the series by Kerri Kenney in a more persistent vein that evolves into an edgy ambivalence throughout the series. It becomes clear why this change occurred in the last episode when the story takes an unexpected turn that finally gives the characters a more relatable level of resonance that forces them out of their self-absorption. BTW Alda shows up in a welcome cameo as Anne's father in the second episode.
The 77th Emmys Acting Nominees in Character
The 77th Emmys Acting Nominees in Character
Check out our gallery of the nominees in the leading and supporting acting categories.
Did you know
- TriviaAlan Alda, who wrote, directed and starred in the original 1981 film, has a small role in this series. He appears as Don in Episode 2. In the 1981 film, Alda played Jack, the same character Will Forte plays. Alda was 45 when the film was released, and was 89 when the miniseries was released.
- ConnectionsFeatured in The 77th Primetime Emmy Awards (2025)
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Чотири пори року
- Filming locations
- Warwick, New York, USA(Mount Peter)
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 30m
- Color
- Sound mix
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content