Current:Home > ScamsReview: 'The Perfect Couple' is Netflix's dumbed-down 'White Lotus' -VitalWealth Strategies
Review: 'The Perfect Couple' is Netflix's dumbed-down 'White Lotus'
View
Date:2025-04-27 05:17:27
You know exactly what you're getting when you sit down to watch "The Perfect Couple."
Netflix's latest limited series has a seemingly, ahem, perfect recipe: Beautiful Nantucket beaches, an attractive young cast; a frothy 2018 Elin Hilderbrand novel as its source material; a mysterious death to investigate; terrible rich people to boo; and Nicole Kidman with a bad wig. It's going for "Big Little Lies" on the East Coast, or maybe "White Lotus" for New England WASPs. Or perhaps it's "The Undoing" with brighter lighting. Whatever it is, it certainly aspires to be the kind of addictive, soapy, whodunit drama akin to these successful series that have taken over the zeitgeist over the past few years.
"Perfect Couple" (now streaming, ★★½ out of four) feels like it's made from a bunch of pieces of different series, and it's quite telling. The series is a bit of a mishmash and at times, a very unfocused story that would probably have been better off with fewer episodes, or just a movie with all the excess fluff trimmed out. Too many modern TV series waste viewers' time; they're frustrating "slow burns" that take forever to get to the good stuff if there's any good stuff at all. "Couple," by contrast, is good at its start and fantastic at the end but drags painfully between, a fluffy doughnut with bland filling.
But it's still a doughnut: Chewy, gooey and fun.
"Couple" takes place at a picturesque Nantucket mansion owned by the blue-blooded Winbury family, led by its ice-cold matriarch and bestselling author Greer (Kidman) and weed-smoking layabout patriarch Tag (Liev Schreiber). They're hosting a blowout wedding for their son Benji (Billy Howle) and his very middle-class fiancé Amelia (Eve Hewson of Apple's excellent "Bad Sisters"). But the seaside soiree is interrupted when a body is discovered on the beach. Now all the dirty little secrets of this seemingly perfect family (filled with perfect-looking couples) come out into the open.
Need a break? Play the USA TODAY Daily Crossword Puzzle.
The cast is worth far more than the material they're given, including "Lotus" alum (and Emmy nominee) Meghann Fahy as the party-girl maid of honor and Dakota Fanning as an unambiguously awful future sister-in-law to the bride. Fanning at times appears to be the only one who realizes what kind of series she's in, and her unserious mean-girl vibe is a delectable treat. You'll love to hate her and hate to love her for her snide comments and the time she takes a lick from someone else's wedding cake.
Without revealing who died or how (at Netflix's request), it's hard to talk about the plot other than to say it often makes little sense. A slew of disparate threads that might relate to the central mystery but are quickly resolved. There aren't enough red herrings to make it a whodunit that begs the audience to guess the killer (if there is one). Plus it is extremely frustrating that the procedural elements move at a glacial pace, from the police looking up things as simple as phone records all the way in Episode 5 to the press being uninterested in a mysterious death on the property of a famous and wealthy family until weeks later.
Still, the ending is juicy and genuinely surprising, part of a finale episode that is rollicking good time. If only its melodramatic, borderline ridiculous tone could have been replicated in each of the installments. It's clear that creator Susanne Bier ("The Undoing") attempted it, down to the opening credits that feature the cast in a choreographed dance to "Criminals" by Meghan Trainor. It's practically begging for a TikTok trend (if the kids don't deem it too "cringe").
Hilderbrand is known for her quick and satisfying "beach reads," and "Couple" might have been better served if it had been released over a lazy hot summer weekend when binge-watching six hours of an OK-bordering-on-good show seemed like the best use of time. During a busy September with dozens of new and returning series vying for our attention, it might not feel worth it.
After all, nothing is really perfect.
veryGood! (88)
Related
- 'Most Whopper
- New Jersey police capture man accused of shoving woman into moving NYC subway train
- California Gov. Gavin Newsom to make a one-day visit to Israel en route to China
- Woman says she was raped after getting into a car she thought she had booked
- San Francisco names street for Associated Press photographer who captured the iconic Iwo Jima photo
- Arizona’s Maricopa County has a new record for heat-associated deaths after the hottest summer
- Georgia agrees to pay for gender-affirming care for public employees, settling a lawsuit
- Britney Spears recounts soul-crushing conservatorship in new memoir, People magazine's editor-in-chief says
- 'Malcolm in the Middle’ to return with new episodes featuring Frankie Muniz
- AP Week in Pictures: Asia
Ranking
- Whoopi Goldberg is delightfully vile as Miss Hannigan in ‘Annie’ stage return
- Southern California university mourns loss of four seniors killed in Pacific Coast Highway crash
- Shooter attack in Belgium drives an EU push to toughen border and deportation laws
- 'Killers of the Flower Moon' cast: Leonardo DiCaprio, Robert De Niro headline new Scorsese movie
- The FBI should have done more to collect intelligence before the Capitol riot, watchdog finds
- Erin Foster Accuses Chad Michael Murray of Cheating on Her With Sophia Bush
- Julia Fox says dating Ye felt like having 'two babies': 'So unsustainable'
- More than 300 arrested in US House protest calling for Israel-Hamas ceasefire
Recommendation
Juan Soto to be introduced by Mets at Citi Field after striking record $765 million, 15
Rite Aid plans to close 154 stores after bankruptcy filing. See if your store is one of them
Marte hits walk-off single in ninth, D-backs beat Phillies 2-1 and close to 2-1 in NLCS
Delta expands SkyMiles options after outrage over rewards cuts
Are Instagram, Facebook and WhatsApp down? Meta says most issues resolved after outages
While visiting wartime Israel, New York governor learns of her father’s sudden death back home
Republicans warn many Gaza refugees could be headed for the U.S. Here’s why that’s unlikely
Anne Kirkpatrick, a veteran cop but newcomer to New Orleans, gets city council OK as police chief