La vie d'une femme, apparemment parfaite, est bouleversée lorsque son mari lui laisse 87 milliards de dollars.La vie d'une femme, apparemment parfaite, est bouleversée lorsque son mari lui laisse 87 milliards de dollars.La vie d'une femme, apparemment parfaite, est bouleversée lorsque son mari lui laisse 87 milliards de dollars.
- Nommé pour 1 prix Primetime Emmy
- 2 victoires et 13 nominations au total
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This is beyond boring. The acting is pure vomit. This writing is basic and elementary at most. It's so bad that even Maya Rudolph can't save this one. It's like they approved the script without ever reading it. Everything is so beyond predictable but on top of it it also moves so slow. Every character is exactly the same as every other character from every other show that's exactly like this. It has nothing new to offer. Those friendships are beyond ridiculous. There are so many plot holes that the only question I keep asking myself is "How did this get made???"
This show makes my heart happy. It's lighthearted and charismatic- as some of the best kind of "Netflix" is. You don't have to think too much, or act as if you're a judge on America's Next Top TV Critic (which thankfully, does not exist). Every few minutes, you're hit with a nice "how can't I laugh at that?" - whether it's dialogue or delivery, even bad acting on occasion. By the end of an episode, I find myself rooting for the characters and the actors portraying them.
I dig where Maya's gone with Loot, regardless if it emulates a "real rich lifestyle" or what a "real rich person" might do. Most people can't relate to that anyhow. Hats off to Maya, AppleTV, and the entire team behind Loot for green lighting. Five episodes in and bottom line, Loot's compassionate, fun, and easy to watch when not taken so seriously or literally. If you're into that, it's worth the watch.
I dig where Maya's gone with Loot, regardless if it emulates a "real rich lifestyle" or what a "real rich person" might do. Most people can't relate to that anyhow. Hats off to Maya, AppleTV, and the entire team behind Loot for green lighting. Five episodes in and bottom line, Loot's compassionate, fun, and easy to watch when not taken so seriously or literally. If you're into that, it's worth the watch.
Readers of the critical reviews, keep in mind;
1 - She didn't EARN the billions, she's a billionaire from her divorce.
2 - She didn't mastermind a financial empire for 20 years - her ex did that.
3 - She spent her time as the WIFE of a billionaire, basking in luxury, going to parties (some via travel on one of their private jets), throwing huge parties, going to a spa, and a life that wasn't "normal" at all.
This series is about the collision between her life before the divorce and her life after, as she tries to find some meaning for her existence. And it's funny.
Give it a chance.
2 - She didn't mastermind a financial empire for 20 years - her ex did that.
3 - She spent her time as the WIFE of a billionaire, basking in luxury, going to parties (some via travel on one of their private jets), throwing huge parties, going to a spa, and a life that wasn't "normal" at all.
This series is about the collision between her life before the divorce and her life after, as she tries to find some meaning for her existence. And it's funny.
Give it a chance.
Watched two episodes so far and I'm enjoying the characters and storyline. One of my favorite actors is Nat Faxon and I usually like whatever he's in. I'd say this is kind of a workplace comedy with nice character development.
Based on the credits of everyone involved, this should have been much better than it is. It feels like they had a great pitch meeting at Apple TV, everyone said, "It'll write itself!" and they all went home and cashed their checks.
The writing is both uninspired and lazy. There are lots of warmed over jokes about how filthy rich the lead character is, which have been done much better elsewhere.
The characters are all paper thin and derivative. Her gay assistant is shallow and bitchy. Groundbreaking. There's a major comic scene where she goes on a show and eats too-hot hot wings - which we have all seen Maya Rudolph do already on SNL. Lazy.
The only bright light is Nat Faxon as a timid accountant / love interest. The show springs to life whenever he's on camera. They seem to be moving towards some character development, but so far? Lazy.
The writing is both uninspired and lazy. There are lots of warmed over jokes about how filthy rich the lead character is, which have been done much better elsewhere.
The characters are all paper thin and derivative. Her gay assistant is shallow and bitchy. Groundbreaking. There's a major comic scene where she goes on a show and eats too-hot hot wings - which we have all seen Maya Rudolph do already on SNL. Lazy.
The only bright light is Nat Faxon as a timid accountant / love interest. The show springs to life whenever he's on camera. They seem to be moving towards some character development, but so far? Lazy.
Le saviez-vous
- AnecdotesMolly's house is filmed at a Bel Air mega-mansion called "The One". It is the largest and most expensive home in the U.S. with 105 000 square feet, 21 bedrooms, a 50-car garage and numerous other facilities. It was sold in March 2022 for $126 million.
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- How many seasons does Loot have?Propulsé par Alexa
Détails
- Durée25 minutes
- Couleur
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