


Avis de la communauté (10)
So good. Lough out loud funny as hell and incredibly sad and heartbreaking at the same time. The whole magnificent bittersweet package.
Can anyone do what Phoebe Waller-Bridge manages to do in six episodes? Both here and in Crashing, W-B's immensely smart brain finds a way to fill every second with meaning, nuance and humour. I cannot recommend this show enough. It's brilliant, and will go down in TV history.
Surprisingly good. It takes a few episodes to get a feel for the characters depth but the humor and wit is pretty constant. By the 4th episode you are hooked. I highly recoomend binge watching this gem. I am looking forward to the next season. Hope it has more then 6 episodes.
Decided to watch this because I kept hearing good things about it but it just isn't to my taste. I watched two episodes so in all fairness, I haven't fully watched the show but I simply couldn't bring myself to go for a third episode. While I like the in camera humor that has also been done on shows like Miranda, I found it just a bit too sexual, too vulgar and I normally don't really mind that but it didn't work for me this time around. Storywise I felt like I was just watching a show about a woman who can only think about sex and I wasn't really having it.
I generally hate 4th wall break. The reason why I had put 'generally' in this sentence is #phoebe-waller-bridge's amazing execution of this technique. Her 4th wall breaks made me an accomplice in whatever nefarious thing she is going to do next. I gladly obliged. Fleabag is a story of a younger sibling trying to fit in the world. She does not see the world like everyone else and considering the people in her life, I couldn't blame her either. She has lost her mother recently, and her godmother has eventually filled the void in her dad's life. She and her sister, however, find this hard to digest and are not much fond of the new lady. What ensues is fleabag trying to move on and get a hold of her own life again. She has a very close friend and a confidant who loses her life in an accident. As the show starts, she really has no direction. It is a bit fast-paced for a comedy series. For a non-native English speaker, I struggled a bit initially. American sitcoms have slowed my brain and so a British show with accented English took some time getting used to. But I was thoroughly rewarded for my patience. Phoebe Waller-Bridge is the writer as well as the lead in this show and her command over the medium shows in every scene. Her portrayal of elder and younger siblings is quite perceptive. A tightly-wound elder sister who worries about almost everything in the world. Who is stuck in a bad marriage but has to peddle on because of 'responsibilities' towards a family. #Sian-clifford does a really enjoyable job at that. Then we have their father played by #bill-paterson. He is quite successful and well-to-do but has no clue in the world about how to handle his two daughters after his wife's passing. He stammers around them. Gives them coupons and tickets to feminist seminars, and does everything to keep them somewhat engaged but away from him. But if I had to give one award for the best actor in the series, it easily goes to #olivia-colman. Such an extraordinary genius. It takes tremendous talent to portray livid rage even with a smile and not let it break the forced amiable demeanour. [spoiler]The scene where the priest, played by #andrew-scott, refuses the officiate their wedding, oh that seen I could watch so many times just for her.[/spoiler] Anytime Phoebe is on the screen, she holds your undivided attention, only except when Olivia is on screen. In the second season, the brilliantly talented #andrew-scott enters the show as the priest. This is where the show went slightly downhill for me. He is brilliant. No doubt about it but the story arc gets unnecessarily edgy. The brilliant first season continues rising till the first episode of the second. S02E01 is easily the best episode of the series for me. The premise is aimless by design, but towards the latter part of the second season, it tried to head towards a concrete conclusion. You have to watch for yourself if you are satisfied with the end. The show reminded me of one of the great chaotic movies ever, Roman Polanski's 2011 film, Carnage (I had to stop typing and go watch that trailer once again, it is that good!). With just two seasons, I kept thinking I wanted more, I wanted to know fleabag more. That is the testament to a successful show with a timely exit. With what's happening across the Atlantic, with everyone trying hard to create franchises out of moderate successes, a two-season run is a welcome change. I would recommend this sharply written, brilliantly acted comedy-drama. Finish one season in one sitting, it's more potent that way.
















