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Tag: tv series

I know I’m late to the party! But hey, I’m Trying.

Trying Review – Spoiler Warning

I’ve always been reluctant to watch shows my sister recommends, and then I’ll eventually try them and wish I’d joined the wagon sooner. My sister recommended Trying on AppleTV+ to me a while ago but I was hesitant. It sounded like something I wouldn’t relate to but recently we were trying to spend more time together before she moved, and we binged the first and second seasons.

Well… I really enjoyed it. Its rated 73% on Google, 7.7/10 on IMDB, and 93% on Rotten Tomatoes. Seems like I’m not the only one.

Rafe Spall plays Jason Ross, an English as a foreign language teacher who’s mocked for sticking with a job most 20-somethings only have for their gap year into his mid-30s. Esther Smith plays Nicki Newman, a happy-go-lucky car rental salesperson. Their relationship’s origin story is a little messy on Jason’s end, but they remain extremely strong together throughout both seasons.

The title, Trying, stems (mostly) from the protagonists’ journey into parenthood. After a failed IVF trial, their determination to start a family leads them to adopt. Through the first season, we follow the process of them being approved for adoption. Through the second season, we follow the process of them getting a child.

The show primarily focuses on Jason and Nicki, but they are surrounded by an entertaining, quirky support system. Their best friends, Freddy (played by Oliver Chris) and Erica (played by Ophelia Lovibond), have two children and run into marriage problems following the birth of their second. Nicki’s sister, Karen (played by Sian Brooke), has a boyfriend, Scott (played by Darren Boyd), whose flat-out unlikeable but eventually grows on you.

There are standout performances from Jason’s parents: Victor Ross (played by Phil Davis) and Sandra Ross (played by Paula Willcox). The first season presents them as very upper class and distant. The second season reveals a deeper story. Victor’s love language is acts of service; he may not be the deepest conversationalist, but he will fix everything and anything in Jason’s flat. Sandra clearly has childhood trauma from her mother who dies in the second season; her anger and grief connect her and Nicki. They bond while tearing apart an old shed and screaming. It sounds ridiculous but is very touching.

The most heartwarming character out of the bunch is Jason and Nicki’s social worker, Penny Wootton (played by Imelda Staunton). Staunton’s portrayal of this hardworking, hard-loving woman is a far cry from her notorious portrayal of Professor Umbrage in the Harry Potter franchise. She is chaotic, poised, charming, and motivating. She takes our protagonists under her wing and fights for them. It makes me well up just thinking about it.

Trying is a touching half-hour dramedy that makes you go from laughing to crying in seconds. It seems AppleTV+ knows what they are doing when funding projects like this, Ted Lasso, Dickinson and the new Schmigadoon! Apple is creating a name for itself in the realm of comedy half-hour. Surely they will be considered a must subscribe soon, if not already.

I know I talk a lot about performances, but a good tv show is more than that. The creator, Andy Wolton, impressively has a shortlist of credits for having such a successful series with a major company like Apple. The third season of Trying was greenlit two months before the second season hit the streaming platform. I think if he has anything else on the backburner that breaths like Trying, he’s headed towards a very blissful, rewarding career in half-hour.

Trying‘s colourful palette complements the warmth the characters bring to their stories that feature such deep sadness. The opening credits remind me of the early 2010s when Indie music and ukuleles were all the rage. It has an aged hipster vibe that is comforting instead of mocking. Even the rows of townhouses the protagonists live in are coloured in bright pastels and the markets they shop at feel stylized but real. The show is aesthetically pleasing as much as well written and performed. Something, I feel, is often overlooked in broadcast television.

Overall, I say go watch Trying. It is absolutely incredible.

I Am Not Okay With This Being Cancelled.

Based on the graphic novel by Charles Forsman, I Am Not Okay with This is about 15-year-old Sydney Novak, “Syd” (Sophia Lillis, It [2017]), who recently lost her father to suicide and through her grief has discovered she has an emotional Psychokinesis ability.

Forsman is also the author of The End of the F***ing World which became a Netflix Original in 2017 with the second season in 2019. Christy Hall and Jonathan Entwistle (The End of the F***ing World) are credited as co-creators on this new project, Entwistle directed all seven episodes.

The tone of the two shows are quite similar, they both feature highly pessimistic central female characters and an overwhelming sense of melancholy. Sadly, The End of the F***ing World was renewed for a second season when it didn’t need one and I Am Not Okay with This has not been due to COVID-19 even though it deserves one.

The End of the F***ing World’s first season could stand alone quite successfully whereas I Am Not Okay with This leaves the viewer on the edge of their seat salivating. I want my second season, and I want it now!
Sydney’s mother, Maggie Novak (Kathleen Rose Perkins), and brother, Liam Novak (Aidan Wojtak-Hissong), both create a family environment that balances between toxic and inviting. These relationships are what tether Sydney to a familiar reality.

The adorkable Stanley Barber (Wyatt Oleff, It [2017]) becoming aware of Sydney’s abilities caters more towards a believable fantasy rather than a psychotic break. Lillis and Oleff play off each other well, establish great banter and create a believable allyship. However, Stanley’s role as a willing sidekick makes the story harder to decode.

The unravelling of Sydney’s sexuality with Dina’s (Sofia Bryant) presence is what makes this series truly great. So often we see the dorky boy get with the pessimistic girl because no one else is willing to crack her shell. Here the closeted element derails the series from following this trope while also escalating Sydney’s emotional instability to the point of bottling up so much she destroys a freaking forest. Incredible.

This is why framing I Am Not Okay with This through Sydney’s diary voice-over has me convinced she’s an unreliable narrator.

Here are a few ways I think we can read this series:

  1. The powers represent an undiagnosed mental disorder (that her father also had) and writing about it as superpowers in her diary is a hallucination or unconscious coping mechanism.
  2. The powers are an allegory for the suppression of grief and true self Sydney experiences throughout the series, again she’s an unreliable narrator.
  3. We trust Sydney and say, “Sure. This very sad, complicated teenager totally has superpowers.”

All of these possibilities lure me in. I think the production has a lot to work with. The actors they’ve cast perform beautifully together. The possibilities of how to read Sydney’s abilities offer so much to unpack and play with for viewers. If Netflix is going to renew Riverdale, they should seriously consider renewing this instead.

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