
Peacock's adaptation of the bestseller is ill-conceived, poorly executed, and a waste of 'Succession's' Sarah Snook
2025-11-06 1264词 困难
The title All Her Fault automatically raises the question: Who is “her”? The most conspicuous candidate is Snook’s Marissa Irvine, the mother who shows up on a stranger’s doorstep to pick up her son, Milo (Duke McCloud), on that miserable day. Marissa and her husband, Peter (Lacy), are both big shots in finance—which means she’s an extraordinarily busy working mom, as well as introducing the likelihood that Milo was kidnapped for ransom. Another possible “her” is the friend’s mom, Jenny Kaminski (Dakota Fanning, who was wonderful in last year’s Ripley), an also-overworked publishing exec whose cartoonishly jerky husband, Richie (Thomas Cocquerel), takes no interest in parenting: (“I do my own thing,” he drawls.) Both families have nannies who could be “her." The Irvines’, Ana (Kartiah Vergara), has just left on a suspiciously timed vacation. Ana appears to be hiding something about her connection to the Kaminskis’ nanny, Carrie (Sophia Lillis). Then again, maybe every female character is the eponymous “her.” Which would mean the show is not about a woman, but about the plight of women in general.
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