Les différents membres d'une famille à Los Angeles voient leur passé et leur avenir perturbés quand une révélation qui risque de bouleverser leur vie fait éclater tous leurs secrets.Les différents membres d'une famille à Los Angeles voient leur passé et leur avenir perturbés quand une révélation qui risque de bouleverser leur vie fait éclater tous leurs secrets.Les différents membres d'une famille à Los Angeles voient leur passé et leur avenir perturbés quand une révélation qui risque de bouleverser leur vie fait éclater tous leurs secrets.
- Récompensé par 8 Primetime Emmys
- 56 victoires et 121 nominations au total
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Résumé
Reviewers say 'Transparent' delves into gender identity, family dynamics, and transformation, focusing on a transgender parent and their dysfunctional family. Jeffrey Tambor's performance is highly acclaimed, yet the show faces criticism for unlikable supporting characters, inconsistent tone, and underdeveloped dialogue. Some appreciate its mature themes and nudity, while others find it lacking depth and coherence. The series also examines Jewish identity and complex relationships.
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I kept watching and watching, hoping that as I got to know them I would begin to care about this extraordinarily shallow, spoiled and obnoxious bunch of people - or even to laugh at them for being so relentlessly revolting - but the opposite happened. By the middle of Episode 7 I loathed every one of them so deeply that I just wished The Big One would finally come along, pull the chain, and flush the entire state of California to the bottom of the Pacific Ocean where it belongs. Then it occurred to me that I didn't HAVE to watch this crap, so I stopped.
I love the idea behind this series, and it might have been really good if only there were at least one character I could stand to watch, or laugh at, or maybe even like. There isn't.
Tambor and Hoffman are excellent in roles that fit their talents so perfectly that it's hard now to imagine either of them ever playing any other characters. I do care about those two actors - especially, now, for the first time, Hoffman. I just don't care at all about either character. I wish I wished Maura well, but I just don't. I can't. She's too dishonest and shallow and selfish.
The other actors - with one notable exception - are all right but don't bring any personal depth to their tiresome, narcissistic characters, as Tambor and Hoffman do. The exception is Judith Light, whose restrained and sensitive performance in Save Me was a revelation. Here she shows no subtlety or intelligence at all, playing a Southern California Jewish matron so shrill and strident that the human being is completely lost in the stereotype.
Most of the writing is clever, the production is excellent, and the series might have been a real treat if I could only have cared about even ONE of the profoundly revolting characters.
I love the idea behind this series, and it might have been really good if only there were at least one character I could stand to watch, or laugh at, or maybe even like. There isn't.
Tambor and Hoffman are excellent in roles that fit their talents so perfectly that it's hard now to imagine either of them ever playing any other characters. I do care about those two actors - especially, now, for the first time, Hoffman. I just don't care at all about either character. I wish I wished Maura well, but I just don't. I can't. She's too dishonest and shallow and selfish.
The other actors - with one notable exception - are all right but don't bring any personal depth to their tiresome, narcissistic characters, as Tambor and Hoffman do. The exception is Judith Light, whose restrained and sensitive performance in Save Me was a revelation. Here she shows no subtlety or intelligence at all, playing a Southern California Jewish matron so shrill and strident that the human being is completely lost in the stereotype.
Most of the writing is clever, the production is excellent, and the series might have been a real treat if I could only have cared about even ONE of the profoundly revolting characters.
I began watching this series by accident one night. I am not someone aware of the issues that face trans-gender people but do know a couple of people that have recently began the transition and i thought this series may help the masses to be more accepting of difference. However unfortunately all i have found in both the first and second series are a group of self obsessed selfish individuals and i couldn't dislike the characters more if i tried, there lives are so bizarre, twisted and meaningless and all the seem to do is hurt everyone around them, not one of the characters actually seems to care about any of the others. I am not a prude but I think it is over sexed and untrue to life. Its not funny, its not enlightening, its not even interesting. What it is, is mundane, at times offensive on a number of levels and unbelievable, i do not feel it offers a true insight into any families life but just serves to try and shock, which it also does not achieve.
I will watch to the end of series 2 in the hope that something good will come from this complete waste of my time.
I will watch to the end of series 2 in the hope that something good will come from this complete waste of my time.
Boy I really wanted to like this series. I watched all of Season 1, took a break, and then started watching season 2. I've decided to stop watching because I am so disappointed with the storyline and the characters. This show presents a unique opportunity to include story lines that are unique and important to the transgender community. However, they've chosen to focus on the family and extended family members instead of Jeffrey Tambor's transgender character. This probably would have been acceptable except the family members are so unlikeable! As portrayed they are all selfish, self-absorbed and whiny. It is uncomfortable and for me, unwatchable. I love Judith Light but her character as Jeffrey Tambor's wife is the stereotypical overbearing wisecracking Jewish mom. Jeffrey Tambor is outstanding and is well-deserving of the awards he is receiving. That's really the only redeeming quality of the show. Even the dreadful "I am Cait" deals with trans issues better than this series.
I could blurb on about how poignant this programme is.
I could parp on about how fabulous Jeffrey Tambor is.
I could ramble on about how enlightening it is or I could just say that I loved it, a lot.
Tis true, I really truly loved it. I did a spot of that binge watching thing, made my partner watch it and watched it again with her. I do not think that it is being hyped up due to the subject matter, it is simply a bleeding good programme. The humour doesn't come from a man in a dress, it comes from the keen observations in the writing and the great acting (maybe not from Judith Light's portrayal of an elderly Jewish woman, which I thought was a tad over the top on occasion, not so much in the flash backs though, which were quite lovely). It made me laugh, smile, cry, feel a lot of different emotions through each episode.
After watching it twice, I then went onto to reading about it and found a whole new appreciation for what it is and what Jill Soloway has done here, even though I thought it was fab before, I love it all the more knowing the background to the writing and making of it.
Looking forward to season two, I hope a TV channel picks it up, I'm not a huge fan of this video streaming thing and would prefer to see on a big screen.
I could parp on about how fabulous Jeffrey Tambor is.
I could ramble on about how enlightening it is or I could just say that I loved it, a lot.
Tis true, I really truly loved it. I did a spot of that binge watching thing, made my partner watch it and watched it again with her. I do not think that it is being hyped up due to the subject matter, it is simply a bleeding good programme. The humour doesn't come from a man in a dress, it comes from the keen observations in the writing and the great acting (maybe not from Judith Light's portrayal of an elderly Jewish woman, which I thought was a tad over the top on occasion, not so much in the flash backs though, which were quite lovely). It made me laugh, smile, cry, feel a lot of different emotions through each episode.
After watching it twice, I then went onto to reading about it and found a whole new appreciation for what it is and what Jill Soloway has done here, even though I thought it was fab before, I love it all the more knowing the background to the writing and making of it.
Looking forward to season two, I hope a TV channel picks it up, I'm not a huge fan of this video streaming thing and would prefer to see on a big screen.
What started out as a unique idea and was well written and acted has quickly gone the way of most TV and lost it's way. This last season is simply an annoying repetition of the various characters dysfunctional relationships and in ability to cope. In many ways a lot like my own family which drives me totally nuts. It did better when it was examining the issues and angst of becoming a trans late in life but now has decided to abandon that theme and go on to frustrating portraits of Jewish angst. We cannot follow this show any longer and have abandoned it for more intelligent viewing. This is now nothing more than a copy of all of Woody Allen's earlier movie themes.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesInspired by and loosely based on true events, Transparent draws themes from series creator Joey Soloway's own father coming out as a trans parent three years prior to the show's release.
- ConnexionsFeatured in Conan: Jeffrey Tambor/Al Madrigal/Ashley Monroe (2015)
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Détails
- Durée30 minutes
- Couleur
- Mixage
- Rapport de forme
- 2.00 : 1
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