
On the Verge

Four women, a chef, a single mom, an heiress, and a job seeker dig into love and work, with a generous side of midlife crises, in pre-pandemic LA.
Four women, a chef, a single mom, an heiress, and a job seeker dig into love and work, with a generous side of midlife crises, in pre-pandemic LA.
The story was intriguing but sadly the execution missed the mark. Ella is just a complete mess and [spoiler] tries to exploit her kids in the acting world for money and yet she can't keep a job to save her life. [/spoiler] Yasmin is incredibly whiny in one moment and the next she's a [spoiler] super intelligent 'secret agent' of some sort [/spoiler], but that did not get thrown into her storyline smoothly at all. Anne has a strange power relationship with her mom and also with her husband even though she could be successful on her own. And her husband [spoiler] lives off of her, has left her and she still doesn't want to lose him [/spoiler]....she seems like a strong character but she's probably the weakest. Justine is kind of the saving grace - I like how she's dedicated to her job and her family. Though her husband is [spoiler] emerging as a huge narcissist and constantly degrades American culture and bullies Justine....so she also seems strong but lets her husband walk all over her and still complain that he's 'not a man' because he's not working and says she should be home more instead of working so much...[/spoiler] There is so much hypocrisy in the show. I'm on episode 9 of the 1st season, and I will finish it, but each episode gets worse and worse. It had great potential. Pity.
So empty. Nothing motivates you go further with it. Can't recall where I read that it was a Girls with middle aged voices, but please, don't do Lena Dunham like that.
[Netflix] Between the generational portrayal of female maturity and outright ridicule, the series is a scattered, chaotic compilation of stories that are sometimes hilarious, but generally random and implausible. The relationship with men is surprising, because it seems that the four characters are portrayed as strong women who are nevertheless always subdued, (Justine's and Anne's husbands or Elle's young son).
The story was intriguing but sadly the execution missed the mark. Ella is just a complete mess and [spoiler] tries to exploit her kids in the acting world for money and yet she can't keep a job to save her life. [/spoiler] Yasmin is incredibly whiny in one moment and the next she's a [spoiler] super intelligent 'secret agent' of some sort [/spoiler], but that did not get thrown into her storyline smoothly at all. Anne has a strange power relationship with her mom and also with her husband even though she could be successful on her own. And her husband [spoiler] lives off of her, has left her and she still doesn't want to lose him [/spoiler]....she seems like a strong character but she's probably the weakest. Justine is kind of the saving grace - I like how she's dedicated to her job and her family. Though her husband is [spoiler] emerging as a huge narcissist and constantly degrades American culture and bullies Justine....so she also seems strong but lets her husband walk all over her and still complain that he's 'not a man' because he's not working and says she should be home more instead of working so much...[/spoiler] There is so much hypocrisy in the show. I'm on episode 9 of the 1st season, and I will finish it, but each episode gets worse and worse. It had great potential. Pity.