Two flatmates in their 20s and their messy friendship. Becca and Charlie live together, enjoy pranking each other and don't much like their jobs; to escape their present relationships, both ... Read allTwo flatmates in their 20s and their messy friendship. Becca and Charlie live together, enjoy pranking each other and don't much like their jobs; to escape their present relationships, both girls start dating men in their seventiesTwo flatmates in their 20s and their messy friendship. Becca and Charlie live together, enjoy pranking each other and don't much like their jobs; to escape their present relationships, both girls start dating men in their seventies
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10webloid
Feels like a lot of the bad sentiment about this show comes from a place of misogyny; god forbid young women make complicated decisions and have a libido. Would thoroughly recommend to anyone that enjoyed the same silly humour on Friday Night Dinner.
The lead actors perform the sharp, humorous writing well, and a convincing yet bizarre world is established around them. Again, anyone fans of one the previous lead's past experience (Sex Education), or of the creator's past project, Friday Night Dinner, should thoroughly enjoy the show.
The show covers a range of different concerns facing those in their mid-20s, especially those living around London and big cities, with a light, funny but, when needed, heartfelt touch.
The lead actors perform the sharp, humorous writing well, and a convincing yet bizarre world is established around them. Again, anyone fans of one the previous lead's past experience (Sex Education), or of the creator's past project, Friday Night Dinner, should thoroughly enjoy the show.
The show covers a range of different concerns facing those in their mid-20s, especially those living around London and big cities, with a light, funny but, when needed, heartfelt touch.
Poor imitation of Friday Night Dinner.
Basically the same premise. Follows two people that constantly prank each other. However, instead of being siblings, they are flat mates.
This time the show is a little wackier and doesn't have the heart of FND. Acting is good, but not the same calibre.
Definitely not the worst show in the world; you might get a few giggles out of the first two episodes. After that it gets pretty repetitive.
The best thing honestly is the opening titles.
Doubt it will get a second season, so will look forward to what the creator does next. Hopefully something different.
Basically the same premise. Follows two people that constantly prank each other. However, instead of being siblings, they are flat mates.
This time the show is a little wackier and doesn't have the heart of FND. Acting is good, but not the same calibre.
Definitely not the worst show in the world; you might get a few giggles out of the first two episodes. After that it gets pretty repetitive.
The best thing honestly is the opening titles.
Doubt it will get a second season, so will look forward to what the creator does next. Hopefully something different.
So for some reason they decided to start the series with the "edgiest" storyline, where the 20-something flatmates sort-of date a couple of pensioners. It's a ridiculous premise with very few laughs and to be honest I was going to not bother watching any more...
...but I've had a quiet afternoon so I came back to it and watched the rest of the series.
Any you know what - it's not that bad. The two lead actresses pull off the slightly awkward friendship between Charlie and Becca really well, a handful of the jokes are chuckle-worthy, and some of the supporting characters are very good (in particular Becca's boss and her stepbrother).
But there's plenty that doesn't work. Lots of the pre-launch focus was on the creator, Robert Popper, who's been involved in loads of British comedy shows over the years. He's an old man writing a show about two young women. And although some of the script doesn't ring true, the worst characters are the men. Charlie's boss is an unrealistic idiot, a man that has a crush on her is, well, an unrealistic idiot, and Becca's co-worker is, errr, an unrealistic idiot.
Highlights? Spilled coffee, an awkward Chess accident and a curious greeting.
Second series? Needs stronger jokes and better supporting characters to be worth it.
...but I've had a quiet afternoon so I came back to it and watched the rest of the series.
Any you know what - it's not that bad. The two lead actresses pull off the slightly awkward friendship between Charlie and Becca really well, a handful of the jokes are chuckle-worthy, and some of the supporting characters are very good (in particular Becca's boss and her stepbrother).
But there's plenty that doesn't work. Lots of the pre-launch focus was on the creator, Robert Popper, who's been involved in loads of British comedy shows over the years. He's an old man writing a show about two young women. And although some of the script doesn't ring true, the worst characters are the men. Charlie's boss is an unrealistic idiot, a man that has a crush on her is, well, an unrealistic idiot, and Becca's co-worker is, errr, an unrealistic idiot.
Highlights? Spilled coffee, an awkward Chess accident and a curious greeting.
Second series? Needs stronger jokes and better supporting characters to be worth it.
To be honest I read a few reviews and thought about skipping it but I like her from sex education and thought I'd give it a go. It was like a lot of British comedies, a bit all over the place, new age humour isn't particularly funny, trying to tie in the contradiction that Is the social media hypocrites, it's impossible to please everyone.
There were bits that were natural, I thought parts were very funny, but sometimes they tried to force a joke, that was poor. But overall it was a decent comedy, passed the time on a sick day and I'd watch a series two, I thought there's potential, problem we have these days is people rate 1 or 10/10 so stuff gets loved or binned off. I'd give this one more go, women don't have an easy route in comedy.
The one thing I thought was funny was the intro, it felt like someone watched peacemaker and tried to clone it and it was a fail, it immediately made the characters tougher to like and route for so that was a mistake.
There were bits that were natural, I thought parts were very funny, but sometimes they tried to force a joke, that was poor. But overall it was a decent comedy, passed the time on a sick day and I'd watch a series two, I thought there's potential, problem we have these days is people rate 1 or 10/10 so stuff gets loved or binned off. I'd give this one more go, women don't have an easy route in comedy.
The one thing I thought was funny was the intro, it felt like someone watched peacemaker and tried to clone it and it was a fail, it immediately made the characters tougher to like and route for so that was a mistake.
Writer Robert Popper has worked on some real comedy gold like the Inbetweeners and Peep Show but this wasn't one to add to that portfolio. Despite a good cast and production values the premise and script fell short. It had some amusing moments and good one-liners here and there but the storyline was quite improbable and overall it didn't come off.
Would like to think it will get better over time but can't see a second series for this one as I'm not sure who the audience will be. Not traditionally structured and written sharply enough for older viewers and not 'hip' enough to attract a younger audience.
Bottom line neeeded to be a lot funnier. A middling sitcom that will soon be forgotten.
Would like to think it will get better over time but can't see a second series for this one as I'm not sure who the audience will be. Not traditionally structured and written sharply enough for older viewers and not 'hip' enough to attract a younger audience.
Bottom line neeeded to be a lot funnier. A middling sitcom that will soon be forgotten.
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