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Hindsight tv show
Hindsight tv show









hindsight tv show
  1. #Hindsight tv show movie
  2. #Hindsight tv show series

For VH1, who has not yet renewed it for a second season, the show also marks another kind of crossroad, as far as whether to invest in this kind of riskier scripted fare, or to go back to finding shelter in bottom-barrel reality programming (although it may have found a viable hybrid in the upcoming Barely Famous). While Hindsight is mostly light, it ends on an emotional cliffhanger that necessitates closure, as all of its major characters are at crossroads in their lives.

#Hindsight tv show series

It explores the ever-changing nature of friendships in a way most series don't bother with, which is another way the show distinguishes itself. But Hindsight is also a meditation on friendship, which is its most powerful thread. Like another great 90s-based series (although one that deals with much deeper issues, Britain's My Mad Fat Diary), the shows end up devolving into the partner swapping within a friend group, when it could be about so much more. The time travel mechanics (including a magical guide who only appears twice to Becca or perhaps he's just another traveller) eventually get lost under the weight of the relationship dramatics. Though Hindsight is a fun show, but it's by no means perfect. VH1 has finally embraced that which it was designed to be: a music showcase.

#Hindsight tv show movie

The scrunchies, the movie references (in the perfect 90s job, Lolly of course works at an independent video store), the purple Doc Martins, and the zines are all great fun, but nothing binds Hindsight together as well as its music. Since Becca is reliving the 1990s having come from the 2010s, she laughs at Lolly having an AOL email, and has to get used to pagers again. Of course, Hindsight's biggest draw is how much the show is steeped in 90s nostalgia, yet manages to do so in a way that remains an organic. Further, though Becca is able to change her career and the trajectory of her love life, the things she hopes to avoid become new problems she must face without any idea of how they will end up.

hindsight tv show

History doesn't always repeat, but sometimes - despite her best efforts to thwart it - it does anyway. What's interesting throughout Hindsight's first, 10-episode season (which wrapped Wednesday night) is how Becca's knowledge of the future becomes less and less helpful to her. The only person she is able to confide all of this to is her ditzy and loyal best friend Lolly ( Sarah Goldberg), who is often a fantastic fashion plate of 90s regalia. You weren't expecting time travel to be involved, were you? It's one of Hindsight's biggest and most interesting quirks, as Becca navigates the life of her younger self with the benefit of knowing how certain things turn out. An elevator ride then magically transports her back to 1995 as the Becca on the eve of her first wedding to Sean, where she realizes she's been given an opportunity to change her life. Though she seems happy marrying the buttoned-up Andy ( Nick Clifford), her childhood friend, she's still not certain. Her trepidation and anxiety over the event is keenly felt, as she remembers her disastrous first marriage to an Australian painter, Sean ( Craig Horner). Hindsight starts off by focusing on a 30-something New Yorker in the present day, Becca Brady ( Laura Ramsey), on the eve of her second wedding. That's one of the reasons that Hindsight, a rare scripted series from the network, has felt so different, and so unexpectedly delightful. I'm not sure that there is a more odious iteration of "the screaming, catfighting housewife series" genre than Mob Wives, which has bordered Hindsight on Wednesday nights throughout its first season run. There’s a lot about this show that seems familiar, but then again, it’s also what makes it so kitschy and easy to be sucked into.VH1 has become a channel that has, over the last decade, truly mired itself in reality programming. With a healthy offering of nostalgia, viewers have a chance to ride the wave of “what if’s” along with the characters. Ultimately, the biggest question that Hindsight brings to the table is whether of not Becca has learned enough from the future to let herself be happy in the past. How will Becca’s decisions change not only her life, but the people around her? There’s already some glaring differences starting to pop up between the characters as their past and future selves – mainly her mother, who may undergo the biggest transformation of all if things keep going the way they seem to be. Hindsight also teeters on the idea of something we’ve seen before, the ripple effect (thank you, Back to the Future). Although the concept of hitting the reset button isn’t a fresh idea by any means, the execution brings viewers a comedic take on an old idea, without the hassle of reinventing the wheel.











Hindsight tv show