Article first published as TV Review: FRIENDS FROM COLLEGE on Seat42F.
First, there was Seinfeld. Then It’s
Always Sunny in Philadelphia and Happy Endings. Now, we have FRIENDS
FROM COLLEGE, premiering tomorrow on Netflix.
FRIENDS FROM COLLEGE is another comedy
about a group of pals who aren’t all that likeable, and yet, because of
terrific actors and magnetic, entertaining personalities, we’ll want to
keep watching them, if not rooting for them.
This series isn’t a retread, though;
it’s the natural evolution of the trend. Seinfeld was a light, fun,
nonsense sitcom, and proud of it. Sunny took it a bit dirtier, while
Happy Endings matured the emotional heft. FRIENDS FROM COLLEGE deals
with real issues and isn’t laugh-a-minute with one-liners, but it is
amusing, and it does feel like a premium cable comedy, something that
would also be at home on HBO, as well as its berth on Netflix.
We begin with Ethan (Keegan-Michael Key,
Key and Peele) and Sam (Annie Parisse, Person of Interest), carrying on
an affair they’ve been having since college. Both are married, but both
unions have some serious problems, so they regularly hook up when they
can. It’s that not often, since they live in different cities. As the
pilot begins, Ethan announceshe’s moving back the Big Apple, restoring
their friend group from their Harvard days, but complicating the tryst.
Ethan and Sam are the most central
characters at first, so even though they may not be likeable, they need
to be people we can relate to. And they are. Ethan loves his wife, but
he doesn’t always want what she wants. He’s an author considering
breaking into Young Adult fiction, tired of his award-winning novels not
selling, but detests the genre for reasons that perfectly describe him.
Sam thinks her husband is dumb, and is a little more desperate for
escape, though she clearly likes her (rarely seen on screen) children.
Yes, these are people with arrested
development, lacking the emotional maturity they need to progress. We
all remember times like that, or may still be struggling with some of
the emotions (although hopefully making different choices). I am eager
for the affair to become public knowledge to see what happens, but at
the same time, I worry what that would do to the friend group at the
center of FRIENDS FROM COLLEGE.
The other four primary players are:
Ethan’s wife, Lisa (Cobie Smulders, How I Met Your Mother), who has just
taken a job at a horrible hedge fund; rich trust fund lothario Nick
(Nat Faxon, Married); aspiring (and failing) actress Marianne (Jae Suh
Park, The Big Short); and oft-overlooked book agent Max (Fred Savage,
The Grinder, Wonder Years). Lisa has the most material of the four in
the first half of the season, and Cobie excels at it, but Max has the
funniest bits, and Marianne seems like a simmering cauldron ready to
erupt.
Yes, they are all too involved in one
another’s lives, and it’s not entirely realistic they are all still so
close, but it’s a premise one can overlook to enjoy all of these great
actors playing together. Toss in Max’s partner (Billy Eichner, Difficult
People), who doesn’t like Max’s friends, and Sam’s husband (Greg
Germann, Ally McBeal), who seems to have levels that haven’t yet been
explored, and this is the makings for a long-term series I’d enjoy
watching. I hope Eichner and Germann are promoted to series regular in
season two, as I love how they are outsiders who don’t get the friend
group, which is a valuable thing to have when telling this story.
While this may not be completely
original territory, and as I’ve said, it’s hard to like most of the
characters, I could not stop watching, plowing through half the season
before pausing to write this review, and eager to watch the second half
as soon as I’m done. This is a great cast, and the story, while at times
frustrating, is compelling. I hope it runs a good, long time.
FRIENDS FROM COLLEGE will release all eight episodes of season one tomorrow exclusively on Netflix.
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