Current:Home > ScamsReview: Netflix's 'One Day' is an addictive romance to get you through the winter -ProsperityEdge
Review: Netflix's 'One Day' is an addictive romance to get you through the winter
View
Date:2025-04-16 02:29:29
Twenty years later, you’re not the same person you were when you met the love of your life. But change happens slowly. Sometimes love happens slowly too.
Netflix’s new romance “One Day” (now streaming, ★★★ out of four), is one of those long, lingering relationships. There's no flash-in-the-pan lust or whirlwind vacation romance here. Instead, years of life and love between two very flawed people, Emma Morley (Ambika Mod) and Dexter Mayhew (Leo Woodall, “The White Lotus”).
Based on the book by David Nicholls (also adapted into a 2011 feature film starring Anne Hathaway and Jim Sturgess), “One Day” – as the title suggests – follows its couple on the same day each year, checking in briefly with their lives as they move through their young adulthoods and grow up. These brief glimpses into Emma and Dexter’s lives, on days both unimportant and absolutely vital, offer a broad view of a relationship more complicated than its meet-cute might suggest. The 14-episode, mostly half-hour series is a sweet (and often deeply sad) way to look at life, particularly the turbulent period of burgeoning adulthood, as people change and grow, and also regress.
The series begins in 1988, when Emma and Dexter meet on the day of their college graduation, with endless possibilities ahead of them. After an almost-one-night stand, they embark on a close friendship, leaning on each other as they figure out their lives. As the years go by it becomes clear that their possibilities weren’t as infinite as they once seemed. Dexter sees early success as a TV personality, while Emma’s ambition of becoming a published writer feels unattainable. Each tries their hand at love; each has their own loss.
“Day” isn’t a traditional romance that goes from point A to point B. Their first night together sees awkward conversation, and then deeper conversation, displacing sex. What develops in the years to come is a friendship sometimes strained by requited and unrequited romantic feelings. The stars never align for a more intimate relationship to blossom between them, at least not at first. They go through the ups and downs of adulthood, with personal and professional successes and failures defining and sometimes debilitating them.
Whether or not you've seen the movie, it’s easy to see how a TV show is a much better format to tell this story, with each day corresponding to one episode. The short installments are a delightful bonus. There aren’t enough zippy, engaging, tight series – especially dramas. The brevity contributes to its addictiveness; it’s easy to watch just one more episode when the next promises to be only 30 minutes.
But it wouldn’t succeed without the chemistry between Mod and Woodall, and the young actors establish an onscreen relationship that feels visceral and real. This is no fairytale, and the actors get messy and angry as well as moony and loving. If it’s harder to buy them as Emma and Dexter get into their 30s, that’s not the fault of the actors: They can’t age exactly one year with each passing episode. Different hairstyles and makeup can only go so far when the stars have the unmistakable bloom of youth in their shiny eyes.
But while you may need a suspension of disbelief, the show sails past those awkward continuity elements because the writing and the two main actors have such a command of the central relationship. The show also expertly captures the mood and wayward feeling of young adulthood sliding into just plain adulthood. Time passes for Emma and Dexter as it passes for us all.
There’s a cozy comfort to this series, but it isn’t a Hallmark movie; it’s far more like real life. Happy endings aren’t assured. Hard work doesn’t always mean you make it on top.
But it is so deeply compelling to watch Dexter and Emma try, one day after another.
veryGood! (8543)
Related
- Meta donates $1 million to Trump’s inauguration fund
- Taiwan's companies make the world's electronics. Now they want to make weapons
- CDC tracking new COVID variant BA.2.86 after highly-mutated strain reported in Michigan
- San Francisco launches driverless bus service following robotaxi expansion
- Friday the 13th luck? 13 past Mega Millions jackpot wins in December. See top 10 lottery prizes
- Q&A: A Legal Scholar Calls the Ruling in the Montana Youth Climate Lawsuit ‘Huge’
- Stem cells from one eye show promise in healing injuries in the other
- The British Museum fires employee for suspected theft of ancient treasures
- The company planning a successor to Concorde makes its first supersonic test
- Gun control unlikely in GOP-led special session following Tennessee school shooting
Ranking
- Israel lets Palestinians go back to northern Gaza for first time in over a year as cease
- Small Kansas paper raided by police has a history of hard-hitting reporting
- Lizzo's dancers thank her for tour experience, 'shattering limitations' amid misconduct lawsuit
- What's Making Us Happy: A guide to your weekend reading and listening
- Sonya Massey's father decries possible release of former deputy charged with her death
- California’s Top Methane Emitter is a Vast Cattle Feedlot. For Now, Federal and State Greenhouse Gas Regulators Are Giving It a Pass.
- TikToker Caleb Coffee Hospitalized With Spinal Injury and Broken Neck After Falling Off Cliff in Hawaii
- ‘Blue Beetle’ actors may be sidelined by the strike, but their director is keeping focus on them
Recommendation
Taylor Swift Eras Archive site launches on singer's 35th birthday. What is it?
Middle-aged US adults binge drinking, using marijuana at record levels, new study finds
Survey shows half of Americans have tried marijuana. See how many say they still do.
Kellie Pickler speaks out for first time since husband's death: 'Darkest time in my life'
From family road trips to travel woes: Americans are navigating skyrocketing holiday costs
In Hawaii, concerns over ‘climate gentrification’ rise after devastating Maui fires
Raise a Glass to Ariana Madix's New Single AF Business Venture After Personal Devastation
Military veteran says he soiled himself after Dallas police refused to help him gain restroom entry