It goes without saying yet still needs to be mother daughter sex videossaid: Not every book needs to be adapted for TV or movies. For producers ignoring this warning and moving ahead anyway, you have one job: Tell us why. Why this story, this moment, this medium of storytelling? Why these creative liberties — or lackthereof?
Netflix's Firefly Lane, based on the novel by Kristin Hannah and adapted for TV by Maggie Friedman, is a show that fails to answer any of these questions. It tells the story of best friends Kate (Sarah Chalke) and Tully (Katherine Heigl), who have known each other since eighth grade and remain enmeshed in a tight-knit, volatile, and sometimes unhealthy relationship 30 years later.
Their story is told over three timelines: The '70s, the '80s, and 2003, with the girls aged 14, early 20s, and 43, respectively. Because Chalke and Heigl inexplicably play their 20-year-old selves and the ghost of this creative decision hovers over the entire series, we need to discuss it up front. There is some light de-aging and a cute color filter on the '80s scenes, but we simply do not have the technology to make people in their 40s look 20 years younger. AND THAT'S OKAY. I would have loved to see these 2000s TV darlings owning it as two grown adult women negotiating their mature dynamic. Teen Kate and Tully are portrayed by different actors (Roan Curtis and Ali Skovby, respectively), so why not cast them as the young adults who are just SIX years older? It gets especially fun when 38-year-old Beau Garrett plays mother to 43-year-old Heigl as a 22-year-old. And by fun I mean gaslighting the audience.
Then there's the timelines themselves, which are muddled from the outset by those shared actors in distracting wigs. The show gains absolutely nothing from sticking to Hannah's timeline, adding insult by not committing to the...uniquesartorial aesthetic of 2003. Where are the low-rise bellbottoms, the t-shirts over long sleeves, the weird fringe belts, the ponchos? Maybe these two were old enough to know better, but don't tell me Kate's 29-year-old boss was rocking beach waves in a time when the very air reeked of straightener-burn for the better part of a decade. SHOW IT TO ME. COMMIT.
The reason for this timeline is, ostensibly, a man: Johnny Ryan (Ben Lawson + another horrendous wig), Tully's TV producer who is also Kate's separated husband, father of her child, and the man she fell in love with the moment she laid eyes on him in '82. He reports on the Salvadoran Civil War in 1984 and goes to Iraq in 2003, both of which get a few sentences of exposition but feel incredibly forced. No period of time is lacking in war or trauma that these two events had to anchor the entire show. Johnny even has PTSD from El Salvador, but the entire experience and his character-focused episode come so late in the game that it just does not land. The same happens with Kate's brother Sean (Jason McKinnon) because their stories are concentrated, across multiple timelines, into specific episodes — rather than told linearly as in the book.
Hannah's novel must have something special to get adapted in the first place, that took over a decade after publication, but it gets lost in translation for TV. It's unclear whether this is a weakness of the original text or the adaptation, which doesn't even take on the whole book. Key events remain unexplained even after 10 episodes, and the introduction of a fourthtimeline, 2005. If I want to be yanked through time by emotional upheaval, I'll watch This Is Us, which at least has better age makeup and wig resources.
Ultimately, the on-screen versions of Kate and Tully fail to spark any real feeling. I want Kate to be more assertive, to fight for what she wants and get it. I want Tully to stop self destructing. I recognize parts of myself and my girlfriends and our relationships in these women, but it's all surface level. Mostly I want them to get a little space from each other. There is a deep, sisterly love here, but also an unhealthy mixing of personal, professional. The grown ups sound like teens because these relationships stunted their emotional growth. It's nothing we haven't seen before — but other versions of this story have an emotional resonance that Firefly Lanenever gives.
Firefly Laneis now streaming on Netflix.
Topics Books Netflix
Spoiled doggo with 5 dog beds prefers the floorRyan Reynolds invited Salma Hayek over for dinner, and somehow she got stuck doing all the workSamsung is the world's top smartphone company again, report saysGoats have taken over Instagram and they cannot be stoppedCouple picked their big fluffy dogs to be their best man and maid of honor at their weddingInstagram changes breast holding policy after #IWantToSeeNyome campaignNetflix is developing a liveGoats have taken over Instagram and they cannot be stoppedVideo of dancing Philadelphia voters makes us believe in democracyGoats have taken over Instagram and they cannot be stoppedHow tech can help you thrive amid the pandemic winter bluesCoinbase launches crypto debit card in the U.S.On Nicole Kidman's fabulous coats in 'The Undoing'Taylor Swift takes the stand in lawsuit claiming she was groped by radio DJTry not to have sleepless nights after reading this man's tale about his haunted apartmentLuna gets a huge surprise from dad John Legend and her pals at 'Sesame Street'How this initiative amplifies the voting power of people with past convictionsScientists destroy the first 'murder hornet' nest found in WashingtonNetflix is developing a liveJoin with a Costco Gold Star Membership and get up to $45 off Serena Williams gracefully disses a reporter who called her 'scrappy' Moby's new video has a message for 'unevolved, feral, self The Monica Lewinsky scandal is getting the 'People v. O.J.' treatment 'Split' review: M. Night Shyamalan's new film is a tense, entertaining mess Not even the Minions are safe from Trump's inauguration Mother responding to herself on Twitter is absolute gold Trump wants the U.S. to make iPhones, but you shouldn't Confident dog beats up on a scale for being, well, a scale Feds sue student loan giant Navient: What borrowers need to know How to watch Donald Trump's inauguration Tesla cleared in investigation of fatal Autopilot crash 'A Dog's Purpose' premiere canceled, after outcry over frightened dog video Samsung will finally reveal its report on why the Note7 kept catching fire These LGBTQ teens have a strong message for Donald Trump Today's the day to cuff your Trump Uber will pay $20 million to settle charges that it misled drivers about pay Ariana Grande lookalike has certainly mastered the high ponytail Hardcore retiree defies knitting group rules by trolling Donald Trump The media's subtle way of trolling Donald Trump The CIA is telling us how the agency uses Americans' data
3.4736s , 10522.5078125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【mother daughter sex videos】,Defense Information Network