Girls

(série)
  • USA Girls
Trailer 7
Drama / Comédia
USA, (2012–2017), 29 h 9 min (Minutos: 23–32 min)

Criadores:

Lena Dunham

Música:

Michael Penn

Elenco:

Lena Dunham, Allison Williams, Jemima Kirke, Adam Driver, Zosia Mamet, Alex Karpovsky, Andrew Rannells, Peter Scolari, Becky Ann Baker, Chris O'Dowd (mais)
(outras profissões)

Streaming (1)

Temporadas(6) / Episódios(62)

Conteúdos(1)

From writer/director/actor Lena Dunham and comedy veterans Judd Apatow and Jenni Konner, this scripted half-hour series focuses on a group of women in their early twenties in New York and their adventures in post-collegiate floundering. Two years out of liberal arts school, Hannah (Dunham) believes she has the talent to be a successful writer, though she has yet to complete her memoirshe has to live it first. But when her parents cut her off financially without warning, her New York life becomes a series of humiliating challenges. Further complicating things for Hannah is her unrequited passion for eccentric actor/woodworker Adam, with whom she occasionally has sex, at least when he can be bothered to respond to her text messages. As the harsh reality of rent and bills looms, Hannah leans on her very put-together best friend and roommate Marnie, who has a real job at an art gallery and an even realer boyfriend, neither of which she can admit she might not love. Meanwhile, their gorgeous British friend Jessa, who has travelled to as many different countries as she has had lovers, appears in the city and moves in with Shoshanna, her naive younger cousin. (Roadshow Entertainment)

(mais)

Crítica desta série pelo utilizador DaViD´82 (1)

Girls (2012) 

inglês “I give zero fucks about anything, yet I have a strong opinion on everything, even topics I'm not informed on." First thing which comes to my mind is to write that it is Sex in the City (because a comedy drama from the life of four gentle women in New York under the auspices of HBO) for the younger generation, but it would not be fair to this self-proclaimed generational statement, let alone apt. The two series couldn't be more different in terms of style, humor, target and focus. Sex and the City was an unwanted parody of itself (and therefore an excellent guilty pleasure, that is true) about the age of the "pretend we're in our thirties" and not very bright city cows on high heels and their search for guys/clothes/cocktails and… And nothing more. The neurotic Hannah aka Lena, very much and sometimes to her detriment wannabe Woody Allen in a female version. Dunham has definitely a lot to say about this generation of privileged white people "who do not know what else to do", adolescence, self-search, independence, relationships and life as such and is not afraid to say it very openly, hard, to the point, self-ironically, vulgarly and uses strange sexual aspects and practices. The only question is whether what he says (and especially how he says it; whether through his alter ego or his words that are told by life characters) is something you want to hear in the first place. And this is the polarizing point, because for the fact if you like it or not depends on if you can (not) handle the very unique speech of Lena Dunham. It will either get on your nerves (and through it even the whole series, because he is behind the typewriter, behind the camera and in front of it) or not. And in none of those cases it is not surprising, but if nothing else, it's a grateful target for apt sketches | S1: 3/5 | S2: 3/5 | S3: 5/5 | S4: 5/5 | S5: 4/5 | S6: 4/5 | ()