Una famiglia di Los Angeles con seri problemi nei rapporti vede il passato e il futuro svelati quando un'ammissione drammatica fa svelare i segreti di tutti.Una famiglia di Los Angeles con seri problemi nei rapporti vede il passato e il futuro svelati quando un'ammissione drammatica fa svelare i segreti di tutti.Una famiglia di Los Angeles con seri problemi nei rapporti vede il passato e il futuro svelati quando un'ammissione drammatica fa svelare i segreti di tutti.
- Vincitore di 8 Primetime Emmy
- 56 vittorie e 121 candidature totali
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Riepilogo
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.
Recensioni in evidenza
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.
In what could have been an insight into the different lives of a culture we rarely get to contemplate we instead get to focus on a collection of ugly characters believably reflecting the current state of the self centered American psyche.
The dialog is witty, the acting is convincing, and the action is believable for the country it comes from, and it's a thoroughly engrossingly unpleasant experience that eventually has you wondering "why am I watching these horrible people?".
It's like a lot of American TV of recent years, deriving entertainment from pain & ugliness, and feeding back into the normalisation of that thinking.
I got tricked into watching this by the interesting premise and revolted by the self centered side characters to the point of having to abandon the exercise. I don't want these people in my life.
Like many ppl already said , the last episode sucks. But hey there were 4 great seasons before that. And those were good so enjoy the show, and than open a bottle of wine for the last episode ...
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.
Stories like this only come every so often. Its subject matter is just as strong and as unique as it's cast of characters. I decided to take a chance on watching the pilot after hearing that Jeffrey Tambor plays an interesting role in this story. Beyond original, it is one of his toughest and brilliant performances in his long artistic career. The pace of the show along with it's abundance use of nudity reflects the mundane as well as the rawness Transparent showcases. It's audience is guaranteed to grow as the subject matter starts to become universal to each of the show's characters. Each of them are going through a transformation. This fantastic cast includes Gaby Hoffmann, Judith Light, Jay Duplass, Amy Landecker and Rob Huebel. Each bring a subtle interest to the show's subject matter.
At times there are moments of comedy, sadness and deep thought. Very few shows are able to capture this. Second to only House of Cards, Transparent will and should be the most watched "online" series today.
At times there are moments of comedy, sadness and deep thought. Very few shows are able to capture this. Second to only House of Cards, Transparent will and should be the most watched "online" series today.
Lo sapevi?
- QuizInspired 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.
- ConnessioniFeatured in Conan: Jeffrey Tambor/Al Madrigal/Ashley Monroe (2015)
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Dettagli
- Tempo di esecuzione30 minuti
- Colore
- Mix di suoni
- Proporzioni
- 2.00 : 1
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