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Tag: first look

  • How ‘Couples Therapy’ Will Take On Modern, Messy Love in Its Next Act

    How ‘Couples Therapy’ Will Take On Modern, Messy Love in Its Next Act

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    Couples Therapy finds authentic suspense in its structure—a credit to its cinematic bona fides. “We really don’t know what’s going to happen,” cocreator and executive producer Kriegman says. “There’s a formless reality to the process where we’re trusting our gut, and then really excited to see what comes of it. That’s the joy of this filmmaking.”

    Having now gone through several seasons, Kriegman and his team have a better sense of what they need to work: They see hundreds of couples—the estimate in our interview for how many they saw and considered for this installment alone is 400—and rather than outsource the casting, do it all in-house themselves. Once the ensemble is finalized, the producers give Guralnik the space to conduct her sessions and progress the therapy without interference, but do speak with her regularly during production. She’s not isolated from the process. 

    As Kriegman puts it, “We have conversations about how the work is going, but very much through the lens of the therapy and less through the lens of the filmmaking.”

    “Never in my life as a professional have I had such close scrutiny and supervision of my work as I’ve had in the last [several] years,” Guralnik says. “I did a PhD and then I did another 10 years of analytic training…. But in every [Couples Therapy] session I have people watching the session while I’m doing it, and I have then editors and directors peering over the material and trying to understand it—and talking to me about it later, both session by session and then period by period.”

    This season, Couples Therapy brought on Joshua Altman, an award-winning documentary veteran (All These Sons, Minding the Gap), as a new director. He stepped into a well-oiled machine, but also imbued it with fresh perspective. “To find couples that I felt had this push and pull of genuine love for each other, and at the same time, this dynamic between them that as an audience you’re like, ‘Man, these two should split up’—those feelings are real things that all couples go through,” Altman says. “As I watched other seasons again, I was like, ‘Okay, yeah. How can we pull that out?’”

    One way was through Guralnik directly. For the first time in the series, she’s confronted with a couple she believes, to some extent, she cannot work with, and agonizes over whether to terminate the treatment. The struggles between the pair resonate, initially, as a portrait of a couple in crisis. “But [Altman] was able to say, ‘Oh, no, the story here is as much Orna’s story as it is the couple’s story,’” Kriegman says. “That was a really great insight that took the season to a place that we’ve never been before.” Adds Altman: “We have the benefit of watching things and rewatching things and starting to look at patterns and offering those to her—not as a way to steer her, but to bring up questions and to raise ideas. Sometimes she shuts them down, and sometimes she’s like, ‘That’s really interesting.’”

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    David Canfield

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  • ‘The Other Two’ Is Taking “Big Swings” in Season 3

    ‘The Other Two’ Is Taking “Big Swings” in Season 3

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    Fans of The Other Two—the HBO Max comedy created, written, and executive produced by former SNL head writers Sarah Schneider and Chris Kelly—are used to a bit of jumping around. The critical darling, which follows Brooke and Cary Dubek (Heléne Yorke and Drew Tarver) in their quest to escape the shadow of their Justin Bieber–esque brother, ChaseDreams (Case Walker)—and, eventually, the shadow of their Ellen DeGeneres–adjacent talk show host mother, Pat (Molly Shannon)—premiered on Comedy Central in 2019 before getting scooped up by the streamer for its second season. Nearly two years after making the leap from cable to streaming, The Other Two returns to HBO Max on May 4 for its third season, where it will make its biggest leap yet. 

    After cruising through everything from a Hillsong-inspired baptism to an event dedicated to unveiling a secret Hadid’s face, season two ended on perhaps the best one-off pandemic joke we’ve seen on TV so far. Struggling actor Cary finally got a starring role in an indie film, with rehearsals set to begin—when else?—March 13, 2020. So, is season three all about the harrowing journey of making an indie film about essential workers amidst a global pandemic?  

    Yes, says Kelly. “All 10 episodes take place in real time on March 12, 2020.”

    Molly Shannon in The Other Two.

    Greg Endries/HBO Max

    He’s joking. Instead, Kelly and Schneider wisely decided to jump three years into the future for season three. “We did just skip right the hell over that,” Kelly says. “Please make sure you print that this is not, like, a COVID show. We are not all about COVID now.”

    But season three doesn’t pretend the pandemic didn’t happen, either. “Our show is so grounded in what feels real and current. We didn’t want to make a show that completely ignored our current situation and the ongoing effects of living through a global pandemic,” says Schneider. (Fittingly, we’re talking over Zoom.) “We are three years in the future, but all of our characters have been impacted in some way by what we’ve all gone through. And we just tried to explore different funny routes that that would take them.”

    Season two ended with Cary and Brooke both finding success in their own right—with Cary’s acting career finally taking off and Brooke becoming manager for every other member of her family. But that doesn’t mean all their problems have gone away. If anything, the more things change, the more things stay the same.

    Drew Tarver in The Other Two.

    Greg Endries/HBO Max

    “With the time jump, the family is years into being part of the public eye,” Tarver tells me in a separate Zoom call with Yorke. “I feel like they’ve settled into their fame, or their notoriety, and the issues that they were dealing with have become more commonplace. There’s maybe a deeper layer of, I guess, humiliation and sadness that comes along with that. The show continues to deliver in terms of the characters being humiliated—the ‘other two’ getting humiliated—in a very exciting, funny, new way.”

    The intersection between humiliation and hilarity has always been The Other Two’s bread and butter, whether that’s involved Cary’s nude accidentally going “gay-viral” or Brooke inadvertently leading a “Women can suck!” chant at a panel. But season two proved that The Other Two also excels at pointed cultural satire, with sharp takes on everything from HGTV to Vogue. Cary’s season two dalliance with Dean, a straight actor who wanted to seem gay in public, predated proliferating discussions of “queerbaiting,” while Pat’s talk show, Pat!, arrived right around the morning talk show renaissance that also brought us The Drew Barrymore Show, The Kelly Clarkson Show, and The Jennifer Hudson Show. Clearly, “Pat’s influence knows no bounds,” Kelly jokes. “This is all because of Pat.”

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    Chris Murphy

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  • Elizabeth Olsen Becomes Killer Candy Montgomery in ‘Love & Death’

    Elizabeth Olsen Becomes Killer Candy Montgomery in ‘Love & Death’

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    Four decades later, the anomalous incident remains a morbid fascination. Following a 1990 TV-movie adaptation starring Barbara Hershey and a Hulu limited series last year starring Jessica Biel, Emmy-winning writer and Big Little Lies creator David E. Kelley tackles the stranger-than-fiction story in the HBO Max miniseries Love & Death. The seven-episode project, which premieres on April 27, stars Elizabeth Olsen as Candy, Lily Rabe as Betty, and Jesse Plemons as Betty’s husband, Allan, whose affair with Candy precipitates his wife’s death.

    In an interview with Vanity Fair, Olsen says she leapt at the chance to explore Candy’s complicated psychology—and to “figure out how to be on her side and the life that leads up to that moment.” Director Lesli Linka Glatter drew from Texas Monthly’s two-part account of the incident as well as Evidence of Love, a book from the same writers, Jim Atkinson and John Bloom. The journalists describe Candy as the kind of type A housewife who meticulously prepared meals, volunteered at church, and enjoyed country-western dancing with her friends. Before embarking on an affair with Allan, Candy had created the family she always envisioned for herself—yet found herself yearning for something more fulfilling.

    Speaking about Love & Death, which is set in the late 1970s and early 1980s, director Glatter (Mad Men, Homeland) says, “This is about women and men in this time period—they did everything right. They got married at 20, had kids. [Candy’s husband] Pat was a wonderful supporter and scientist. They moved to the suburbs. They built their dream house. Then why do you feel so profoundly empty inside? Why is there a hole in your heart and psyche a mile wide? She makes a horrible choice how to fill that void.”

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    Julie Miller

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  • ‘Tiny Beautiful Things’ Brings Cheryl Strayed’s “Dear Sugar” Column to Life

    ‘Tiny Beautiful Things’ Brings Cheryl Strayed’s “Dear Sugar” Column to Life

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    Strayed is joyful about putting such a complicated figure on the screen, knowing that fictional female characters are still sometimes skewered for it. She says that when the movie version of Wild came out, she was stunned by the discussions about Reese Witherspoon’s character—that is, Cheryl Strayed—as an unlikable woman. “I was like, What? Likeability has never been my problem,” she says and then chuckles. “But that was shorthand for complexity—somebody who does some things that you’re not supposed to or that maybe are contradictory.”

    Hahn’s character in Tiny Beautiful Things can’t stop doing things she’s not supposed to. She has passed the age that her mother was when she died, and yet Clare has not become the writer—or the person—her mother believed she could be. “It’s a really unique way to tell the story of a life, a nonlinear memoir,” Tigelaar continues. “Like we’re comprised of all these little dots of the stories that make us, and we’re pulling out dots in no particular order, weaving them together into this tapestry to say: [These are the things] that created you, and this is what you have to draw from now.”

    Clare (Kathryn Hahn)By Elizabeth Morris/Hulu.

    Those stories often resonate painfully for Clare, who remembers with horror how unappreciatively she received her mother’s last present. “It’s a very particular thing to lose a parent when you’re a teenager or in your young twenties,” Strayed says. “That group of people has a tremendous amount of regret and guilt, because they were regular teenagers. And in the last years of their mothers’ lives, they treated their mother like shit, you know? I had to grapple with that, too—going back in time and being like, I should have been more grateful for that coat she bought me in the last Christmas of her life.” She shakes her head. “But you have to live with it, you have to forgive yourself, you have to do all the things you have to do. And I love that we got to tell that story in this show.”

    Tigelaar recalls that cast and crewmembers whose lives had been touched by loss often swarmed Strayed when she came on set, recognizing themselves in her evocation of grief as a long and steady hum, rather than something you get over and stay over. In fact, Strayed once wrote in a Dear Sugar column that her own writing comes from “the divine place within me that is my mother. Sugar is the temple I built in my obliterated place.” Strayed wanted to make sure that came through in the series, too. “At a lot of points in this season, everything’s all messed up,” she says thoughtfully. “The thing I find so moving about this character is that she leans in the direction of empathy and kindness and telling people that they can—that they can find love, that they can believe in themselves, that they can go on for another day—in the form of this advice column. She’s the conduit for not only the best parts of herself, even when everything’s gone to hell, but the best parts of us.”

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    Joy Press

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