Art Watkins returns to the neglected resort of Broken Bay when his mother dies. On spending time there he becomes enmeshed in the lives of the locals and finds heaven in the most unexpected ... Read allArt Watkins returns to the neglected resort of Broken Bay when his mother dies. On spending time there he becomes enmeshed in the lives of the locals and finds heaven in the most unexpected places.Art Watkins returns to the neglected resort of Broken Bay when his mother dies. On spending time there he becomes enmeshed in the lives of the locals and finds heaven in the most unexpected places.
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I enjoyed the show on the whole, but the side characters were definitely more interesting and appealing than the leads. In particular, Kathryn Beck was luminous and captivating as Lizzy. Loved this character/performance immensely.
"The formula is to find an interesting location. That little seaside place near Melbourne worked for "Seachange" but we had better pick somewhere in NSW for balance. How about Byron Bay? It has a nice lighthouse, beautiful beach, pretty bushland. Now, what about a cast? Some big names, regardless of whether they suit the parts, will get the viewers in. Now, we've done the 7:30 time slot. Let's throw in some sex and load the plot with angst to make it suitable for the 8:30 slot. Music: there are lots of unknown country and western singers writing songs out there who need the money. We could hire them for next to nothing." The result is a disaster, boring, depressing. I agree with those on the message board who say they don't care what happens to the characters. They are all self-made losers. The writers obviously don't like real estate agents as we now have a female version of Bob Jelly. Richard Roxybaby is supposed to be the heart-throb like William McInnes and David Wenham were in "Seachange" but his character is unlikeable. Tom Long's flat delivery mimics his "Seachange" role, showing him to have a very limited range. The acting otherwise is generally very good but nothing could save this hopeless writing.
I wish I could find more shows like this (besides the ones I know - Detectorists comes to mind). A real bummer sometimes, a real hoot other times. A real slice-of-life feeling. I loved the subdued, very real differentiation of the characters, and although I didn't like some of them in the beginning I came to like all of them very much. Some viewers might call the love that develops left and right in this show sappy. I don't. It's the way I think and hope all of us pull together and push through things as honestly as we can. It also has a bit of a commune thing going on, which I like.
Great characters, some you love, some you don't, but all great!
The chemistry between Art and Eve is brilliant. Loved Vance, Lizzy and Bec...so many more!
Great Aussie drama with great Aussie humour.
I remember enjoying this when it first came out in 2008/9. I have recently been binge watching 2 episodes each night on Acorn TV.
Just as great second time around!
I don't know why they didn't make more???
I loved the first series of this show. I've watched it twice as I love the tone, the drift between humour and melancholy. The characters are well-drawn, well-acted and the location is stunning. I really believed that Eve and Art were still in love after all this time and that Art and Vance were brothers. Plus all the supporting roles were beautifully cast. The second series seemed to lose it's way a little but it's still worth watching.
- How many seasons does East of Everything have?Powered by Alexa
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