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The Four Seasons, Not The Smart Relationship Portrait It Tries To Be.

Rating: **

Some of Netflix’s recent  content has  precipitated  a prolonged season of discontent. The Four Seasons doesn’t diminish the  din of mediocrity that threatens to drown the  ones that make  a difference.

This one most assuredly  doesn’t amount to much  except a mound of  flat jokes melted  to the  ground by their own vacuousness, about  relationships  with some solid acting but no plotting-heft to back up the  actors. In the absence of  a clear gameplan The Four Seasons moves  ahead  ostensibly on  its own volition.

The  relationship of the  friends  among a stack of  smug humour feels  like  a stand-up  joke  which  only the  comedian on  stage  is  into. The audience laughs  out of  politeness. Or maybe complacency.

When we first meet the six lifelong friends  now in their  50s(hence the  mid-life crisis)we can  see  the pastiche of  camaraderie coming apart at the seams, when Nick(the wonderful Steve Carrell) announces he is leaving his wife of many years, and not  for  another woman, at least not now.The  Other Woman comes in Season 2, and she is  no spouse-snatcher but a  woman eager to find a place among the lifelong  friends.

These are some of the better moments in a series hellbent on hara-kiri. The tonal  shifts  from humour to  pensiveness  don’t work. Portraying Anne (Kerri Kenney-Silver) as a gullible do-gooder was not the brightest of ideas, as it stomps out  all drama from the  marital  breakup. Instead we get  simulated  irony when Anne  just happens to land up on the same vacationing  spot as her former husband Nick and his new partner, not  once but repeatedly.

Frankly, I would have liked to see Anne  as  a more strongly constructed , pivotal  character struggling to  get over  a  marriage  she  never thought would break, like Shabana Azmi in Arth.Instead  the tragedy is dwindled  to a  series  of giggles, not quite  as funny as the series’ creators  would like them  to be.

The flawed  writing is further  floored  by the freaky formatting; each episode  captures a  holiday  with the friends re-uniting at some exotic  spot. This  kind of touristic mood  cuts into the graver  ramifications  of  the relationship among  friends.

In the way, for example,  Kate(Tina Fey)begins to  question her own  marriage  with the  hyper-emotional  Jack(Will Forte)….or take  the gay couple, very  convincingly played  by  the  super-talented  Coman Domingo and Marco  Calvani…in  the  way that one  of the  two begins to feel suffocated by  the ceaseless attention of the other…the series   brings up the issue  of  giving  space in relationships but doesn’t know  how to negotiate those spaces.

Sometimes, too much can be damaging.  This  issue  doesn’t  govern  the series  itself as much as the  lives of  the characters. The series never gets animated enough to  cross limits.

 

 

 

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