As is often the case, the boring answer to working through all of this in real life is “these people probably would benefit from therapy,” but that’s not generally how storytelling goes. How storytelling goes is that loving and being loved, while not curative, is good for you. And that’s not not true. If there were any reason to be confident that Netflix would give us five seasons of this story, there might have been time to work through some of this baggage in a more thorough way, and I would have enjoyed seeing that, but that’s not the world we live in.
There are some conspicuous traps that Too Much avoids along the way. While Wendy and Jess have different body types, Jess doesn’t spend the series talking about how she will never be loved because of how she looks, or despairing over her attractiveness (that Felix is attracted to her is never really in question), which is a road this story absolutely might have taken with other creators.
And even though Jess is fixated on Wendy, and the conclusion to that fixation certainly has a rom-com-y quality to it, the story isn’t really mad at (or contemptuous of) Wendy; it’s mad at Jess’ ex, Zev — played by Michael Zegen, who also played Joel on The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel and is really carving out a niche as an ex you can totally understand why a woman once loved and emphatically no longer does.
Every romantic comedy needs supporting characters to fill out a convincing world, and on top of Dunham, Perlman and Wilson as Jess’ home team, this one gets terrific work from (among others) Richard E. Grant as the weird British boss Jess can’t quite figure out; Naomi Watts as his endearing odd duck wife; Andrew Rannells as Jess’ brother-in-law who’s also her boss in New York; Janicza Bravo as her savvy co-worker; Kaori Momoi as Felix’s loving, aggravating mother; and Stephen Fry as his casually devastating father. Andrew Scott also has a very funny drop-in that it would be unfair to explain in much detail.
There are certainly some things about Too Much that seem undercooked, including a rushed ending that doesn’t quite live up to the emotional authenticity of the rest of the story. But the more time I’ve had to sit with this show, the more affection I’ve had for it. A lot of that is down to Stalter, who gives what’s likely to be one of my favorite performances of the year as a woman who is self-evidently terrific but who plausibly feels awkward in the world. And to Sharpe, who can both be Healing Dream Guy and very much Also Damaged Guy, and whose sense of quiet can help convey that those are, in this case, the same person.
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