Reviews

Russian Doll season 2 is the Natasha Lyonne show, for better or worse

Mirrors are tricky objects. We see each other and we don’t see each other. We see reflections, reversals. Sometimes a mirror is a tool for adjusting makeup or tangled hair. Sometimes they are enemies that show us what we don’t want to see. to Russian doll Season 1, Nadia Vulvokov (Natasha Lyonne) wakes up from the bathroom on her 36th birthday, stands in front of the sink, and looks at herself in the mirror. She can easily fit on the central hook. Russian dollThe first season of: Nadia was born or maybe blessed. She dies and keeps waking up at her 36th birthday party. Over the course of the season, Nadia teamed up with a man named Alan (Charlie Barnett) and was destined or blessed to share the same fate. He too wakes up from her death in front of the bathroom mirror.

Together they meander through New York City’s Lower East Side to unravel the mystery of what is happening to them. Are you stuck in a wormhole? Matrix flaws? Is it a moral dilemma? Mysterious Curse? Jew ground hog day? Why did these two people, Nadia and Allen, come together in this cosmic hiccup? Attracted by Lyonne’s characteristic bends and smoker’s creaking, Nadia is hastily killed with every breath she takes. She bravely embraces everyone and everyone and never misses the opportunity to live a little harder. Alan, on the other hand, sticks to the routine and absorbs all the potential for joy and surprise in life. He is in good shape, careful and polite. she surrenders he restrains himself Yet they die and die again.

second season of Russian doll It’s more of a journey through a room of mirrors than a quest for death or a lesson on life and life. This serves as an advantage for the show. There is no need to see the boredom of the same day over and over, let alone in the middle of an ongoing epidemic. However russian dollThe second season gives the protagonist a sense of belonging almost entirely, rather than yielding to the protagonist’s obsessive quest for healing.

Nadia and Nora in the 1970s

photo: netflix

Nora pregnant on the streets of New York

Photo: Vanessa Clifton/Netflix

the joy of Russian doll Discovery, but consider the name of the show itself as you contemplate the format and features of season 2. Russian doll — Matryoshka. A large mother doll – the word matryoshka literally means matron – with three small dolls on her body. They are distinctly 19th century Eastern European traditional crafts, available in all shapes and colors, clothing and expressions. History and sophistication reminiscent of women of the past are nestled in it.

In fact, the second season Russian doll Nadia travels through time rather than death, traveling back in time on Train 6, physically disguised as a major maternal character. First she lives with her mother Nora (Chloë Seveigny), then with her grandmother, on a pointless quest through history to find the lost Krugerrands of her family. If she can give her money back to her mother and make sure her mother doesn’t lose her, then she might have hope for all of them. Partly because we watched the first season of Russian doll, we know the situation is not so simple. Life isn’t full of possible McGuffins, and we don’t have time to explore the implications this can have on the space-time continuum.

In fact, in the first episode of season 2 Russian dollA man on the street asked Nadia, “Do you believe in the future of mankind?” “Define the future,” he asks. It’s true. For Nadia, the future is not the most important thing, it is a fact. Our minds are nostalgic in our repetitive, everyday lives. It’s no longer enough for Nadia (if she’s lucky) to live the same day over and over again. Now she wants to apply that kind of thinking, adaptability, and paranoid thinking to her entire story. Our Russian doll, she herself, unfolds in front of her audience. Maybe there’s a way that everything worked out, not just for her, but for everyone she cares about. However, this redeemer complex is also addressed in the question she posed. humanity. Nadia can’t afford to think of anyone else. Her she has people who took care of her her.

It’s easy to be skeptical about the second season of Russian doll, partly because the first season Lyonne had co-produced with Leslye Headland and Amy Poehler for nearly a decade felt too independent and the finale was cathartic and ambiguous. A three-year hiatus in the streaming world could be ten years. Turning on a new episode isn’t a strange dream, but in a way it feels like waking up from the dead. Unfolding and refolding in season 2 despite its twists and turns Russian doll still Russian doll we know and love His humor, his darkness, and his curiosity about the history of the ego in the context of the larger story – what it specifically means for Nadia to be now a Jew after a long and painful history of her ancestry as a Jew Then – Make it stand out from the TV landscape. Her unpredictable and her intelligent Nadia gallops through her own story, unraveling her stacked characters who live within her. Because that is another characteristic of matryoshka dolls. It contains itself and does not have a small population within it. Russian dolls have no friends. And this season is a more introspective and exclusive isolated journey in storytelling. It’s pretty cool to keep going.

Nadia and Maxine are standing in the woods, looking at rocks piled up on something out of focus in the foreground.

photo: netflix

So far, Russian dollThe second season of ‘You don’t have to get too familiar with the first season. It’s closer to the prequel than the sequel. The show doesn’t catch up with you quickly on the lives of the characters in the years since we saw them. The show is quickly catching up with Nadia. Those returning for the new season, especially those whose memories of the past three years have become unrecognizable, may wish to revisit the latter episodes of the show’s first season to document Nadia’s eccentricity and obsession, rather than the big Easter Eggs. you may want Mom Nora (Chloe Sevigny) appears in the flashback. She too was fascinated by mirrors and had a destructive obsession to destroy them.

That’s how it felt in his first season. Russian doll Partly because Sevigny and Lyonne are old New York City friends, Nora was brought in. In Season 1, the two didn’t share a single scene, but there was a tangible link not only in their pain, but also in their irony and humor. But doubling Nora in season 2 feels tense. She certainly suffers in a way that suggests these problems started long before Nadia appeared in the picture. all the girls there Russian doll Although suffering (perhaps due to Maxine’s career in trouble), the source of Nora’s pain felt almost like a one-off pain by the end of season one. Season 2 works to correct this a bit, but it doesn’t feel more specific. And her hatred of mirrors, or her fear, progresses inconsistently through the early episodes of season two.

But the mirror doesn’t bother Nora anymore. Here they come for Nadia. In season 1, a mirror hovered over her shoulder when Nadia showed Alan the back of her friend’s bathroom door. But Nadia and Alan focus on the swirling blue light.

“Yeah, because there are no black holes in my bathroom…” Alan sighed, not realizing that the mirrors in both bathrooms were hanging right behind them. Same thing as last time they looked inside. It’s a quiet, fun moment that often doesn’t exist in the show’s second season. It’s action-packed and full of characters, leaving little time for human moments. The fact that Nadia can now turn back time can be seen blinking or seeing twice before moving on to the next level.

Nadia pushes the mirror open like a door and bangs her head against the wall.

photo: netflix

Alan is standing on the escalator in the subway station.

Photo: Andras Dr. Hajj/Netflix

It’s a welcome change in season 2 that Nadia and Allen have gone through a point where they have to deal with all the oddities of their lives, but the fact that there’s no secret that holds them together in a meaningful way, their relationship matters most. Season 1 – Dropped in the middle, leaving only the message “So, uh, how are you?”

Instead of dynamism, the second season gives way to intrigue and complexity. Sometimes observing and taking notes seemed appropriate. Nadia’s journey through the past should be interesting and insightful, but it’s often disappointing to see the way the show indulges in the twists and turns of the character. There are new supporting characters rushing through Nadia’s world, and none of them stay too long to impress. Sharlto Copley is there for a little while teasing a bigger role than he’s been given. One of the sweetest new faces is Ephraim Sykes, who is always there to help. But, like Alan, they were kicked out instead of Nadia’s journey of self-discovery. The second season hints at strong developments in his character, but all of this remains relatively unexplored and leaves the viewer to analyze.

One of the exciting parts of Season 1 was how funny the main cast was. The amazing Elizabeth Ashley as Ruth, the ridiculous Greta Lee as Maxine, and the charming Rebecca Henderson as Lizzie. The fact that these characters step aside for Nadia’s journey is noticed and noticed. Doesn’t all time travel lead to the realization that living in the present is more valuable than fixing the past? in the first season of Russian doll, Nadia had to secretly share her existential struggles with her friends, and in return we should know more about her. Here, Maxine comes to Budapest for more than jokes and kisses. We know it’s possible for an ensemble television show to revolve around a self-centered and self-motivated protagonist. We saw it in season 1. Russian doll. Here Nadia’s journey is so specific that she has no choice but to go alone. It works better for some people than others, but it’s still undeniably sad.

On the other hand Russian dollSeason 1 asked “Why is this happening to me?” Season 2 asked, “Why am I doing this?” We are all the product of our eyes and the people around us, and we fall apart in love and frustration. Forward, backward, traverse – in the end always travel through experience. that Russian dollLeaning on the abstract and mystical, the new season of ‘is certainly a leap and a risk, and only those who have definitely set foot behind it will know if it was worth it.


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Russian Doll season 2 is the Natasha Lyonne show, for better or worse

Mirrors are tricky objects: we see ourselves and we don’t see ourselves. We see a reflection, a reversal. Sometimes mirrors are a tool for adjusting makeup or an errant hair; other times they’re an enemy, showing us something we don’t want to see. In Russian Doll season 1, Nadia Vulvokov (Natasha Lyonne) wakes up in the bathroom, standing at the sink, on her 36th birthday, looking at herself in the mirror. It is often easy to latch onto the central hook of Russian Doll’s first season: that Nadia is doomed — or maybe blessed — to die and wake up at her 36th birthday party over and over again. Over the course of the season, Nadia links up with a man named Alan (Charlie Barnett) who is also doomed — or maybe blessed — to meet the same fate. He, too, emerges from death standing in front of his bathroom mirror.
Together, they wend their way through New York City’s Lower East Side to solve the mystery of what is happening to them. Are they caught in a wormhole? A glitch in the Matrix? Is this a moral quandary? A mystic curse? A Jewish Groundhog Day? Why are these two people, Nadia and Alan, united in this cosmic hiccup? Nadia, helmed by Lyonne’s signature wryness and smoker’s rasp, courts death with every inhale. She’ll bravely ingest anything and anyone, never missing a chance to live a little harder. Alan, on the other hand, is faithful to routine, sucking all the potential for joy and surprise out of his life. He is in good shape, careful, and polite. She indulges; he refrains. And yet they die and die and die.
The second season of Russian Doll is less of an exploration of death, less a lesson in living and reliving, and more of a journey through a hall of mirrors. This works to the show’s advantage: we don’t need to see the tedium of the same day over and over again, let alone in the midst of an on-going pandemic. But Russian Doll’s second season elides a sense of relatability almost completely, instead indulging in its protagonist’s self-obsessed journey towards healing.

Photo: Netflix

Photo: Vanessa Clifton/Netflix
The joy in Russian Doll is discovery, but in thinking about the form and function of its second season, consider the name of the show itself: Russian Doll — a matryoshka. A big mother doll — the word “matryoshka” translates literally to matron — nests three smaller dolls inside of her body. They are a distinctly Eastern European traditional artifact dating back to the 19th century, coming in all shapes and colors and clothing and expressions. Within them, they nest history and artfulness, a harkening back to women of the past.
Indeed, the second season of Russian Doll takes Nadia on a journey not through death but through time, using the 6 train to rocket backwards into her past, physically embodying key matriarchal figures. First she inhabits her mother, Nora (Chloë Seveigny), then her grandmother, on an ill-begotten search through history to locate her family’s lost krugerrands. If only she can get the money back to her mother — and keep her mother from losing it — then maybe there’s a hope for all of them. In part, because we’ve seen the first season of Russian Doll, we know things aren’t that simple. Life is not filled with possible macguffins, and there’s not time to delve into what ramifications this could have on the time-space continuum.
In fact, in the first episode of the second season of Russian Doll, a man on the street asks Nadia, “Do you believe in the future of humanity?” “Define ‘future,’” she snaps. It’s true: for Nadia, the future is not of the utmost importance, and it’s true: in a life that becomes repetitive and routine, our minds give way to nostalgia. No longer is it enough that Nadia once got to live the same handful of days (if she was lucky) over and over again — now she wants to apply this kind of thinking, this adjustable, editorial mindset, to her whole history. The versions of herself, our Russian doll, unpack and unfold in front of the viewer. Maybe there’s a way for this to have all gone right, not only for her, but for everyone she cares about. But this savior complex is also addressed in the question she’s asked: the future of humanity. Nadia can’t afford to think about everyone else. She’s got her people, the ones who made her, to look out for.
It’s easy to be skeptical about the second season of Russian Doll, in part because its first season, crafted for almost a decade by Lyonne alongside Leslye Headland and Amy Poehler, felt so self-contained, its finale equal parts cathartic and ambiguous. A three-year hiatus in the world of streaming might as well be a decade. Turning on a new episode feels, in a sense, like waking up from dying, if not an odd dream. Despite its twists and turns, its unfolding and refolding in season 2, Russian Doll is still the Russian Doll we know and love. Its humor, its darkness, its curiosity in the history of the self in the context of greater history — what it means, specifically, for Nadia to be Jewish now, after a long and tormented history of her ancestors being Jewish then — let it stand apart in the television landscape. Equal parts unpredictable and intellectual, Nadia hurtles forward through her own history, unpacking the stacked figurines that live inside her. Because that’s the other thing about a matryoshka doll: it contains itself. There are not small populations inside of it. The Russian doll doesn’t have friends. And in turn, this season is an isolated journey, more introspective and exclusive, in its storytelling. It’s quite a ride to go on.

Photo: Netflix
To this point, Russian Doll’s second season doesn’t require too much familiarity with the first: it functions almost more as prequel than sequel. The show is not quick to catch you up on the lives of the characters in the years since we’ve seen them; the show is quick to catch you up with Nadia. Those returning to the new season, especially those whose memory of the past three years has blurred beyond the point of recognition, may want to revisit later episodes in the show’s first season, not because of any grand Easter eggs, but rather in making note of the eccentricities and obsessions of Nadia’s mother, Nora (Chloë Sevigny), who appeared in flashback. She, too, had a fascination with mirrors, and a destructive obsession with destroying them.
In its first season, it felt like Russian Doll brought Nora in, in part, because Sevigny and Lyonne are longtime New York friends. Though the two never shared scenes in season 1, they had a tangible connection, not only in their suffering but in their wryness and humor. The doubling down on Nora in the second season, however, feels strained: she is tormented, certainly, in a way that suggests these troubles started long before Nadia was in the picture. Every woman in Russian Doll suffers (maybe Maxine the least of all, if only because she’s made a career out of annoyance), but the source of Nora’s pain felt, in the tail end of season 1, to be almost a throwaway affliction. Though season 2 works to rectify that, a little, she never feels any more specific. And her hatred of mirrors, or fear, maybe, lingers incoherently through the second season’s early episodes.
But the mirrors don’t only bother Nora now. Here they come for Nadia. In the first season, when Nadia shows Alan the back of her friend’s bathroom door, the mirror lingers over their shoulder. Nadia and Alan, however, focus on the blue swirling light.
“Yeah, my bathroom doesn’t have a black hole, so …” Alan sighs, when little do they know the thing both bathrooms have — a mirror — hangs right behind them, and when they look into it, what they see is never the same as the last time they glanced inside. It’s the kind of quiet, funny moment that is often lacking in the show’s second season. Because it’s so plot-rich and character-dense, there’s little time for these moments of humanity. That Nadia is now capable of traveling back in time get a blink, maybe a double-take, before it’s time to move on.

Photo: Netflix

Photo: András Dr. Hadjú/Netflix
That Nadia and Alan have moved passed the point of needing to solve every oddity in their life is a welcome change into the second season, but without a mystery that unites them in a meaningful sense, their relationship — so much the paramount of the first season — gets abandoned, left to a mere “so, uh, how are you doing?” catch-up conversation midway through the episodes.
In lieu of their dynamic, the second season gives way to plottiness and complexity; at times, it felt appropriate to watch and take meticulous notes. Whereas Nadia’s trip through the past should be thrilling and illuminating, it’s often frustrating to watch the show indulge in twists and turns above its characters. There are new side characters that flit in and out of Nadia’s worlds, none of them sticking around too long to make much of an impression. Sharlto Copley is around for a minute, teasing a greater role than he’s given. The most delightful of the new faces is Ephraim Sykes, always around to give a helping hand. But they, like Alan, have been shunted in lieu of Nadia’s journey of self-discovery. Though the second season hints at a strong development in his character, this all goes relatively unexplored, left to the viewer to parse.
Part of what was so thrilling about its first season was how fun its core cast was: the great Elizabeth Ashley as Ruth, the hilarious Greta Lee as Maxine, the charming Rebecca Henderson as Lizzy. That these characters take to the sidelines in service of Nadia’s journey is remarked upon and noted — doesn’t all time travel amount to the realization that living in the present is more valuable than fixing the past? In the first season of Russian Doll, Nadia got to cryptically share her existential struggles with her friends, and in turn, we got to learn more about them. Here, Maxine comes along to Budapest and doesn’t do much more than quip and kiss. We know it’s possible for an ensemble television show to arrange itself around a self-centered and self-motivated protagonist; we saw it in season 1 of Russian Doll. Nadia’s journey, here, is so hyper-specific that it gives her no recourse other than to go it alone. Though it may work better for some than others, it’s still undeniably sad.
Whereas Russian Doll’s first season asked: “Why is this happening to me?,” its second season asks, “Why am I like this?” We are all the products of those before and around us, collapsing inward in love and frustration. A journey forward, backward, sideways — it’s always ultimately a journey through an experience. That Russian Doll’s new season leans into abstraction and mystery is certainly a leap, a risk, and only those who land, sure-footed, on the other side will be certain if it was worth it.

#Russian #Doll #season #Natasha #Lyonne #show #worse

Russian Doll season 2 is the Natasha Lyonne show, for better or worse

Mirrors are tricky objects: we see ourselves and we don’t see ourselves. We see a reflection, a reversal. Sometimes mirrors are a tool for adjusting makeup or an errant hair; other times they’re an enemy, showing us something we don’t want to see. In Russian Doll season 1, Nadia Vulvokov (Natasha Lyonne) wakes up in the bathroom, standing at the sink, on her 36th birthday, looking at herself in the mirror. It is often easy to latch onto the central hook of Russian Doll’s first season: that Nadia is doomed — or maybe blessed — to die and wake up at her 36th birthday party over and over again. Over the course of the season, Nadia links up with a man named Alan (Charlie Barnett) who is also doomed — or maybe blessed — to meet the same fate. He, too, emerges from death standing in front of his bathroom mirror.
Together, they wend their way through New York City’s Lower East Side to solve the mystery of what is happening to them. Are they caught in a wormhole? A glitch in the Matrix? Is this a moral quandary? A mystic curse? A Jewish Groundhog Day? Why are these two people, Nadia and Alan, united in this cosmic hiccup? Nadia, helmed by Lyonne’s signature wryness and smoker’s rasp, courts death with every inhale. She’ll bravely ingest anything and anyone, never missing a chance to live a little harder. Alan, on the other hand, is faithful to routine, sucking all the potential for joy and surprise out of his life. He is in good shape, careful, and polite. She indulges; he refrains. And yet they die and die and die.
The second season of Russian Doll is less of an exploration of death, less a lesson in living and reliving, and more of a journey through a hall of mirrors. This works to the show’s advantage: we don’t need to see the tedium of the same day over and over again, let alone in the midst of an on-going pandemic. But Russian Doll’s second season elides a sense of relatability almost completely, instead indulging in its protagonist’s self-obsessed journey towards healing.

Photo: Netflix

Photo: Vanessa Clifton/Netflix
The joy in Russian Doll is discovery, but in thinking about the form and function of its second season, consider the name of the show itself: Russian Doll — a matryoshka. A big mother doll — the word “matryoshka” translates literally to matron — nests three smaller dolls inside of her body. They are a distinctly Eastern European traditional artifact dating back to the 19th century, coming in all shapes and colors and clothing and expressions. Within them, they nest history and artfulness, a harkening back to women of the past.
Indeed, the second season of Russian Doll takes Nadia on a journey not through death but through time, using the 6 train to rocket backwards into her past, physically embodying key matriarchal figures. First she inhabits her mother, Nora (Chloë Seveigny), then her grandmother, on an ill-begotten search through history to locate her family’s lost krugerrands. If only she can get the money back to her mother — and keep her mother from losing it — then maybe there’s a hope for all of them. In part, because we’ve seen the first season of Russian Doll, we know things aren’t that simple. Life is not filled with possible macguffins, and there’s not time to delve into what ramifications this could have on the time-space continuum.
In fact, in the first episode of the second season of Russian Doll, a man on the street asks Nadia, “Do you believe in the future of humanity?” “Define ‘future,’” she snaps. It’s true: for Nadia, the future is not of the utmost importance, and it’s true: in a life that becomes repetitive and routine, our minds give way to nostalgia. No longer is it enough that Nadia once got to live the same handful of days (if she was lucky) over and over again — now she wants to apply this kind of thinking, this adjustable, editorial mindset, to her whole history. The versions of herself, our Russian doll, unpack and unfold in front of the viewer. Maybe there’s a way for this to have all gone right, not only for her, but for everyone she cares about. But this savior complex is also addressed in the question she’s asked: the future of humanity. Nadia can’t afford to think about everyone else. She’s got her people, the ones who made her, to look out for.
It’s easy to be skeptical about the second season of Russian Doll, in part because its first season, crafted for almost a decade by Lyonne alongside Leslye Headland and Amy Poehler, felt so self-contained, its finale equal parts cathartic and ambiguous. A three-year hiatus in the world of streaming might as well be a decade. Turning on a new episode feels, in a sense, like waking up from dying, if not an odd dream. Despite its twists and turns, its unfolding and refolding in season 2, Russian Doll is still the Russian Doll we know and love. Its humor, its darkness, its curiosity in the history of the self in the context of greater history — what it means, specifically, for Nadia to be Jewish now, after a long and tormented history of her ancestors being Jewish then — let it stand apart in the television landscape. Equal parts unpredictable and intellectual, Nadia hurtles forward through her own history, unpacking the stacked figurines that live inside her. Because that’s the other thing about a matryoshka doll: it contains itself. There are not small populations inside of it. The Russian doll doesn’t have friends. And in turn, this season is an isolated journey, more introspective and exclusive, in its storytelling. It’s quite a ride to go on.

Photo: Netflix
To this point, Russian Doll’s second season doesn’t require too much familiarity with the first: it functions almost more as prequel than sequel. The show is not quick to catch you up on the lives of the characters in the years since we’ve seen them; the show is quick to catch you up with Nadia. Those returning to the new season, especially those whose memory of the past three years has blurred beyond the point of recognition, may want to revisit later episodes in the show’s first season, not because of any grand Easter eggs, but rather in making note of the eccentricities and obsessions of Nadia’s mother, Nora (Chloë Sevigny), who appeared in flashback. She, too, had a fascination with mirrors, and a destructive obsession with destroying them.
In its first season, it felt like Russian Doll brought Nora in, in part, because Sevigny and Lyonne are longtime New York friends. Though the two never shared scenes in season 1, they had a tangible connection, not only in their suffering but in their wryness and humor. The doubling down on Nora in the second season, however, feels strained: she is tormented, certainly, in a way that suggests these troubles started long before Nadia was in the picture. Every woman in Russian Doll suffers (maybe Maxine the least of all, if only because she’s made a career out of annoyance), but the source of Nora’s pain felt, in the tail end of season 1, to be almost a throwaway affliction. Though season 2 works to rectify that, a little, she never feels any more specific. And her hatred of mirrors, or fear, maybe, lingers incoherently through the second season’s early episodes.
But the mirrors don’t only bother Nora now. Here they come for Nadia. In the first season, when Nadia shows Alan the back of her friend’s bathroom door, the mirror lingers over their shoulder. Nadia and Alan, however, focus on the blue swirling light.
“Yeah, my bathroom doesn’t have a black hole, so …” Alan sighs, when little do they know the thing both bathrooms have — a mirror — hangs right behind them, and when they look into it, what they see is never the same as the last time they glanced inside. It’s the kind of quiet, funny moment that is often lacking in the show’s second season. Because it’s so plot-rich and character-dense, there’s little time for these moments of humanity. That Nadia is now capable of traveling back in time get a blink, maybe a double-take, before it’s time to move on.

Photo: Netflix

Photo: András Dr. Hadjú/Netflix
That Nadia and Alan have moved passed the point of needing to solve every oddity in their life is a welcome change into the second season, but without a mystery that unites them in a meaningful sense, their relationship — so much the paramount of the first season — gets abandoned, left to a mere “so, uh, how are you doing?” catch-up conversation midway through the episodes.
In lieu of their dynamic, the second season gives way to plottiness and complexity; at times, it felt appropriate to watch and take meticulous notes. Whereas Nadia’s trip through the past should be thrilling and illuminating, it’s often frustrating to watch the show indulge in twists and turns above its characters. There are new side characters that flit in and out of Nadia’s worlds, none of them sticking around too long to make much of an impression. Sharlto Copley is around for a minute, teasing a greater role than he’s given. The most delightful of the new faces is Ephraim Sykes, always around to give a helping hand. But they, like Alan, have been shunted in lieu of Nadia’s journey of self-discovery. Though the second season hints at a strong development in his character, this all goes relatively unexplored, left to the viewer to parse.
Part of what was so thrilling about its first season was how fun its core cast was: the great Elizabeth Ashley as Ruth, the hilarious Greta Lee as Maxine, the charming Rebecca Henderson as Lizzy. That these characters take to the sidelines in service of Nadia’s journey is remarked upon and noted — doesn’t all time travel amount to the realization that living in the present is more valuable than fixing the past? In the first season of Russian Doll, Nadia got to cryptically share her existential struggles with her friends, and in turn, we got to learn more about them. Here, Maxine comes along to Budapest and doesn’t do much more than quip and kiss. We know it’s possible for an ensemble television show to arrange itself around a self-centered and self-motivated protagonist; we saw it in season 1 of Russian Doll. Nadia’s journey, here, is so hyper-specific that it gives her no recourse other than to go it alone. Though it may work better for some than others, it’s still undeniably sad.
Whereas Russian Doll’s first season asked: “Why is this happening to me?,” its second season asks, “Why am I like this?” We are all the products of those before and around us, collapsing inward in love and frustration. A journey forward, backward, sideways — it’s always ultimately a journey through an experience. That Russian Doll’s new season leans into abstraction and mystery is certainly a leap, a risk, and only those who land, sure-footed, on the other side will be certain if it was worth it.

#Russian #Doll #season #Natasha #Lyonne #show #worse


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