This cooling liability series is shot in one, one of the best Netflix originals if -the it
Netflix releases a lot of original materials – or “content” as they are unfortunately Originals even disappear from stretch marks either just Get too fast cancel). If I am honest, I can also say that a large percentage of these originals can be completely unforgettable and one -off. That’s why, when something is really wonderful, it is necessary to highlight and reinforce. All this must say that “adolescence”, a new limited series with Smemer, not only worth looking, but also one of the best Netflix originals that has released so far.
Created by Jack Torn and Stephen Graham (also stars), “teenage”-is painful, anxious, often strange story told with a unique hook: each of the four episodes unfold in real time, one long. While one of the episodes remains (mostly) rooted in the same room, the rest travel freely, which means that the camera is constantly moving, walking the characters from one place to the next. The cynical viewer may give up this as a reception, but the “teen” uses an approach to make each episode even more intense – the absence only increases the tension and pressure, and leads to almost hypnotic quality. We are not ashamed to take your gaze, fearing something to miss (Just like the recent Hit “Mads”).
Teenage Age – it’s not the mystery of murder but it connects you like this
The “teenager” does not lose time, starting the sequence in which the police invaded a suburban family in the UK and arrests 13-year-old Jamie Miller (Owen Cooper) for killing one of his classmates. Jamie’s parents, Eddie (Graham) and Manda (Christina Tremark), of course, are embarrassed at the sight of their young son, and Jamie seems scary, even when the officer -aristades, the detective inspector Luke Basque (Ashley Walters) tries to give him advice on how to cope with these upset moments.
With this setting you might think that the “teen age” is a mystery about murder. But by the end of the first episode it becomes clear that Jamie is guilty – there is literally a safety frame that showed that he applied the girl to death. Jamie continues to claim that he is innocent, but his fault is not really a care about the show. Instead, a “teenage” attempt to investigate why a 13-year-old boy is a brutal murder. Is he a psychopath? Are his parents guilty?
Each episode jumps a little forward, and the big picture becomes clear. While Jamie is obviously a child, he was also invested by toxic garbage on the Internet “Men’s Rights”, similar to which are often discarded by shore wolves such as Andrew Teyt. With this approach, the “teenage level” could easily fall into a special area of ​​corn on the road, essentially hunting the parental fears of children these days, spending too much time on this damn Internet. But the “adolescence” is smarter than this, enhanced by its unique film production and strong performances. Everyone here gives everything that is immersed in emotionally charged roles, which feel true and true.
In adolescence, it is not easy to observe but deserves them to see them
Almost every episode of “adolescence” feels like an excellent-there is no “one big episode”, but rather a collection of four convincing stories that each land on the viewer. The first episode is all about Jamie’s arrest. The second episode has a Basque and its partner (Faye Marsay) who attend Jamie school and believe that this is something chaotic hell. The third episode is particularly nervous as a clinical psychologist who played Erin Dagerti with a decisive stredness, has an interview with Jami, which leads to a breakthrough.
The finale is something epilogue showing how Jamie’s family struggles with his life after such a terrible, destructive event. I will not ruin what will happen, but I will say that the very last moments of this last episode have broken me emotionally, thanks to the devastating performance of Graham, when the father who came to the action of his son and his own potential personal failures.
“Teenage” is not a simple clock – each episode in its own way causes trouble. And yet, the end result is great, and the proof that Netflix can actually get something wonderful rather than the old forgotten slope that moves through the algorithm. I won’t say you enjoy Something as chilled and raw as “adolescence”, but it’s a Netflix series that deserves to watch them.
“Teenage” has now been broadcast on Netflix.