Entertainment Extra

May 14, 2022

Entertainment Extra - Your source for on screen entertainment from the Logansport Pharos-Tribune

Issue link: https://www.ifoldsflip.com/i/1467726

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 1 of 19

2 ENTERTAINMENT EXTRA By Dana Simpson TV Media I n 2017, Irish author Sally Rooney launched her debut novel, a novel whose title tran- scends boundaries and instantly reminds us of something we've all experienced at some point in our lives, no matter our age or background: "Conversations with Friends." Five years later, after the suc- cess of her other novel-turned- series, "Normal People," Rooney gets the chance to see those conversations come to life on Hulu. "Conversations with Friends" premieres Sunday, May 15, on the streaming platform. Based around the novel's main character Frances (new talent Alison Oliver) and her relation- ship with her ex-girlfriend- turned-best friend, Bobbi (Sasha Lane, "American Honey," 2016), "Conversations With Friends" painfully illustrates the complica- tions that arise in love, friendship and across other various forms of human attraction. While Frances and Bobbi's romantic relationship has been over for approximately three months by the beginning of the series, it's clear the pair are still inseparable. Trouble begins to brew, however, when the two 20-somethings become interest- ed in a slightly older married couple. Melissa (Jemima Kirke, "Girls") and Nick Conway (Joe Alwyn, "The Favourite," 2018), a 37-year-old writer and her early- 30s actor husband, come onto the screen as the newest addi- tions to Frances and Bobbi's rela- tionship. Bold and confident, Melissa is immediately intriguing to the young Trinity College poet- ry students — particularly Bobbi — while Nick sparks an immedi- ate curiosity in Frances. As the plot pushes forward and the two twosomes become a unique foursome, the successful married couple's confidence and experience intermingle with the younger women's interests and desires to create a potentially detrimental relationship dynamic. As a result, Frances and Bobbi end up taking sides in the Conways' relationship, ultimately forcing a wedge between the two best friends. The show's director Lenny Abrahamson, perhaps familiar to Rooney-content TV fans as the producer/director of "Normal People," addressed the story's one-of-a-kind construction in a February 2022 interview with Vanity Fair. "You have these various per- mutations within that quartet of relationships and power dynam- ics and attraction," Abrahamson said of the series. Though he does go on to note that "all of it revolves around Frances." Those who read the novel might recall Rooney's distinctive writing style; the author fre- quently blends various styles of communication — text message threads, emails, etc. — to pro- vide readers with what appears to be inside information. But lit- erary Rooney fans have nothing to worry about when it comes to translating the process to the screen, as the author, who is also one of the show's producers, assured readers of the produc- tion team's intent to keep some parity with the book's tone. "I'm confident we're going to find fresh and interesting ways of dramatizing the novel's dynamics, and I'm excited to watch the process take shape," Rooney said in a February 2020 statement. A September 2019 interview with PBS Newshour's Jeffrey Brown offers even more insight into how the novel's tone affects the storyline as a whole. "I suppose what I was trying to do was observe the texture of the world that I myself was inhabiting," Rooney told Brown. "Even though all the characters are completely fictional and their exploits are very much figments of my imagination, the world that they live in was and is very similar to the world that I was living in as I wrote the book." Needless to say, the creative team has a lot to translate to the small screen, though it should be no problem for Rooney and her seasoned Hulu collaborators Abrahamson, Alice Birch (screen- writer), Catherine Magee (series producer), Ed Guiney (executive producer), Nathan Nugent (film editor), Suzie Lavelle (cinematog- rapher), and Louise Kiely and Karen Scully (casting), all of whom previously worked on "Normal People." While "Conversations With Friends" can be interpreted as a coming-of-age story, the themes that pervade the narrative make it available to many demograph- ics. That said, the rumors of steamy scenes and unsettling sit- uations may make it more appro - priate for viewers older than high school age. Regardless of the audience, however, over the course of its 12 hour-long episodes, "Conversations with Friends" taps into human nature by put- ting often-uncomfortable focus on the thoughts and experiences that drive our lives individually and as a part of the collective conscience. Schwering Realty 2 x 2" Pear Tree Gallery 3 x 2" On the Cover Jemima Kirke and Sasha Lane in "Conversations With Friends" Rehashing 'Conversations with Friends' Chase Center 3 x 2" American Legion Post 60 2 x 3" Thrifty Muffler 2 x 2.5"

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of Entertainment Extra - May 14, 2022