A vida de um terapeuta de sucesso em Nova York começa a desmoronar na véspera da publicação de seu primeiro livro.A vida de um terapeuta de sucesso em Nova York começa a desmoronar na véspera da publicação de seu primeiro livro.A vida de um terapeuta de sucesso em Nova York começa a desmoronar na véspera da publicação de seu primeiro livro.
- Indicado para 2 Primetime Emmys
- 2 vitórias e 31 indicações no total
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Avaliações em destaque
Felt a little rushed in a couple of places but otherwise very watchable.
Ruined only by some unintentionally comical moments when Nicole Kidman attempted to convey fear and other emotions on her overly botoxed face.
Ruined only by some unintentionally comical moments when Nicole Kidman attempted to convey fear and other emotions on her overly botoxed face.
What a great show with some fantastic twists already and superstar acting. However following Nicole Kidmans most recent unnecessary self imposed changes to her face it makes it difficult to know is she acting , is she sad , happy , frightened .... otherwise very good show
This is a "Oh my God, don't say I have to wait a week until the next episode" kind of show. Great thriller. Great acting by Kidman, Grant and Sutherland. Well worth setting aside an evening just to watch.
It started out with a very strong screenplay. It had intelligent dialogue. The acting performances were all very good. Unfortunately, Fernando Alves character wasn't developed. The show remain strong until ep5. Ep5 and ep6 direction did not impressed me as well as the first four episodes.
I am not sure what the point was with Sylvia Steineitz or Miguel Alves. I'm not putting down the show, but I felt the climax could have been taken in a different direction. It is certainly better than many of the other TV shows running on streaming platforms.
I am not sure what the point was with Sylvia Steineitz or Miguel Alves. I'm not putting down the show, but I felt the climax could have been taken in a different direction. It is certainly better than many of the other TV shows running on streaming platforms.
Better late than never, this Bank Holiday weekend I finally found the time to catch up with "The Undoing", another of 2020's zeitgeist shows that I missed at the time. I don't think I've got any grand new perspective to offer here, I found it a well-acted drama, with a couple of interesting twists, but with an ending that I found a little underwhelming.
The life of privilege that Grace Fraser (Nicole Kidman) enjoys begins to unravel when her husband Jonathan (Hugh Grant) is accused of murder. The victim is Elena Alves (Matilda De Angelis) an artist, whose son attends the same school as the Frasers son, Henry (Noah Jupe). Grace learns that Jonathan has been hiding aspects of his life from her for years, not least that he and Elena have been having an affair.
So what did I really think? I thought that it was reasonably enjoyable. I liked the fact that the episodes often ended on cliff-hangers, or with potentially major reveals, however, they were a little less effective than they might be, given that I watched the whole series over a couple of days. The performances were reasonably good. Hugh Grant's recent renaissance continues with his turn as a the duplicitous but generally engaging Jonathan. I would, perhaps, like to see Nicole Kidman show a bit more range again, as this is another rich, wife, victim role straight after "Big Little Lies". Edgar Ramirez is a little wasted in a generic detective role. Donald Sutherland, perhaps like Nicole, could do with playing something other than rich, emotionally distant roles for a while. Nobody noticeable lets the side down though.
I was with the plot until then end. This is hard to talk about without spoilers and the show is really one big reveal of who killed Elena. . . But I'll say this, I don't think that the reveals on the final day of the court case would have been as damning as they are made out to be. Nor did I find the events of the last few scenes to be as interesting or satisfactory a conclusion as I hoped.
It's all fine, don't get me wrong, a good enough story elevated by some star power - it just didn't merit the hype it had at the time.
The life of privilege that Grace Fraser (Nicole Kidman) enjoys begins to unravel when her husband Jonathan (Hugh Grant) is accused of murder. The victim is Elena Alves (Matilda De Angelis) an artist, whose son attends the same school as the Frasers son, Henry (Noah Jupe). Grace learns that Jonathan has been hiding aspects of his life from her for years, not least that he and Elena have been having an affair.
So what did I really think? I thought that it was reasonably enjoyable. I liked the fact that the episodes often ended on cliff-hangers, or with potentially major reveals, however, they were a little less effective than they might be, given that I watched the whole series over a couple of days. The performances were reasonably good. Hugh Grant's recent renaissance continues with his turn as a the duplicitous but generally engaging Jonathan. I would, perhaps, like to see Nicole Kidman show a bit more range again, as this is another rich, wife, victim role straight after "Big Little Lies". Edgar Ramirez is a little wasted in a generic detective role. Donald Sutherland, perhaps like Nicole, could do with playing something other than rich, emotionally distant roles for a while. Nobody noticeable lets the side down though.
I was with the plot until then end. This is hard to talk about without spoilers and the show is really one big reveal of who killed Elena. . . But I'll say this, I don't think that the reveals on the final day of the court case would have been as damning as they are made out to be. Nor did I find the events of the last few scenes to be as interesting or satisfactory a conclusion as I hoped.
It's all fine, don't get me wrong, a good enough story elevated by some star power - it just didn't merit the hype it had at the time.
Você sabia?
- CuriosidadesNicole Kidman performs the intro-song, a cover of "Dream a Little Dream of Me". It was director Susanne Bier's idea to have her perform it, and Kidman's husband Keith Urban helped her record the cover.
- ConexõesFeatured in Jeremy Vine: Episode #3.212 (2020)
- Trilhas sonorasDream a Little Dream of Me
(uncredited)
Performed by Nicole Kidman
Written by Fabian Andre, Wilbur Schwandt and Gus Kahn
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Detalhes
- Data de lançamento
- País de origem
- Centrais de atendimento oficiais
- Idioma
- Também conhecido como
- The Undoing
- Locações de filme
- Empresas de produção
- Consulte mais créditos da empresa na IMDbPro
- Tempo de duração1 hora
- Cor
- Mixagem de som
- Proporção
- 2.00 : 1
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