A husband begins to track his wife's extramarital affair with a male escort.A husband begins to track his wife's extramarital affair with a male escort.A husband begins to track his wife's extramarital affair with a male escort.
Browse episodes
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMatt passmore and Nicky whelhan are both Australian actors
- ConnectionsReferenced in Ceesay's Stories: BTS on The Walking Dead w/Karen Ceesay (2021)
Featured review
The pilot of Satisfaction was very good. In its 65' feels more like a movie than an episode of a series.
Neil, a successful investment banker and a family man, has an epiphany and thinks he's living a life without meaning. He decides to do something about that, to speak the truth, to take matters in his own hand, but... the results are far from what he might expected! After the end of the pilot everything seems completed though. Most of the characters did their circle and any farther reference to them anymore seems futile. But it's a show, not a movie! So these characters keep coming back. Their story didn't end but now they seem totally unnecessary.
Just finished watching the second (42' this time) episode and now my initial good review is changing to the worst. The editing is now avoiding crucial parts of what is happening. The script is making the characters more wooden and predictable. I, as a viewer, now care less about them.
The show unfortunately turns into a sitcom. There are even some elements of comic relief, like with a Buddhist "Monk" (another character who completed his circle in the pilot, but he is still present in the 2nd episode) who's pickpocketing a cellphone to send a SMS.
Also in the second episode we get to see the title sequence, with a nip-tuck version of Satisfaction (by the Rolling stones), that I really truly wished not to be the music theme of series, but in vain.
Overall: See the pilot. If you question yourself after, "Where the show goes from here?" skip the rest of the series.
Neil, a successful investment banker and a family man, has an epiphany and thinks he's living a life without meaning. He decides to do something about that, to speak the truth, to take matters in his own hand, but... the results are far from what he might expected! After the end of the pilot everything seems completed though. Most of the characters did their circle and any farther reference to them anymore seems futile. But it's a show, not a movie! So these characters keep coming back. Their story didn't end but now they seem totally unnecessary.
Just finished watching the second (42' this time) episode and now my initial good review is changing to the worst. The editing is now avoiding crucial parts of what is happening. The script is making the characters more wooden and predictable. I, as a viewer, now care less about them.
The show unfortunately turns into a sitcom. There are even some elements of comic relief, like with a Buddhist "Monk" (another character who completed his circle in the pilot, but he is still present in the 2nd episode) who's pickpocketing a cellphone to send a SMS.
Also in the second episode we get to see the title sequence, with a nip-tuck version of Satisfaction (by the Rolling stones), that I really truly wished not to be the music theme of series, but in vain.
Overall: See the pilot. If you question yourself after, "Where the show goes from here?" skip the rest of the series.
- How many seasons does Satisfaction have?Powered by Alexa
Details
- Runtime44 minutes
- Color
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content