Lena Dunham, Too Much
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Lena Dunham's new Netflix series has moments of hilarity, great chemistry between its leads, and snappy star cameos. But its main character isn't quite sure who she is - so the show isn't either
Watts has pivoted to TV in recent years, leading Netflix's hit series The Watcher (2022) and playing magazine editor Babe Paley in Ryan Murphy's Feud: Capote vs. The Swans (2024), the latter of which landed her Emmy and Golden Globe nominations. Next up is another Murphy series, All's Fair.
Sharpe bonded with the character, Felix, in Dunham’s scripts and worked with Felber to write his character’s songs on the show. He plays the aspiring musician as deeply sensitive with a dry sense of humor,
Lena Dunham's romantic comedy, set in London, is lighter in tone than 'Girls,' but still comes with plenty of dysfunction, self-sabotage and sex.
This new Netflix comedy by Lena Dunham is the surprisingly mild tale of a young woman fleeing New York after a catastrophic breakup.
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Lena Dunham, Megan Stalter, and Will Sharpe talk about the Netflix rom-com series 'Too Much.' Breakups, heartache, and social media aren't a good mix.
As we open up on Too Much Episode 3 (“Ignore Sunrise”), these two crazy kids are still in that early flush of feelings for one another, possessed with a cheery eagerness to experience each other in every possible way at every possible moment.
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With “Too Much,” “Girls” creator-star Lena Dunham has made her long-awaited return to television, and the ensemble she’s brought along with her is, well, too much. The series stars viral comedian and “Hacks” breakout Megan Stalter and “White Lotus” Season 2 star Will Sharpe as the central couple: Jessica,
Into this fray enters Lena Dunham, the oft-controversial writer/director/actor whose HBO series “ Girls ” was a conversation-driving cultural force throughout its run from 2012-2017. Her last TV show was 2018’s “Camping,
I’m going to risk sounding cheesy because that’s what Too Much — not to mention Stalter and Dunham — brings out in a person, but it really seems like he’s singing from a broken heart. It made me think of when Jeremy Strong went on Marc Maron’s WTF podcast (RIP) and brought up something Al Pacino said,