TMC
06-04-2022, 05:14 AM
https://www.indiewire.com/2022/06/apple-tv-physical-season-2-better-rose-byrne-1234729938/
"The first season received mixed reviews from critics, with several pointing out that Sheila’s voice-over narration, coupled with her character’s eating disorder, were anxiety-inducing and indulging in disordered eating stereotypes," says Kristen Lopez of the Apple TV+ dark comedy. "Season 2 feels like a course correction with a desire to embrace the 'autonomy' (creator Annie) Weisman found interesting about women and aerobics in the 1980s. Sheila is working to tailor herself into a lifestyle brand, but everyone else in her orbit is working on themselves, too. Rose Byrne was good before, but with stronger writing and a more confident character arc, she is utterly amazing in Season 2. Much of this is shunted to the latter half of the season, once Sheila enters a downward spiral that sees her seeking out fitness instructor Vinnie Green (Murray Bartlett) while contemplating recovery. But even within the first half of the season she’s wonderful. At one point, she’s doing an aerobic performance at a local fair, but ends up being laid low by a mysterious pain. Watching Byrne perform, a smile on her face, while her inner monologue tells her to dance through the pain is an effective summation of the season: Sheila has learned to push through the pain when she now doesn’t have to. She can be strong and confident without needing to hurt."
ALSO:
It's impossible to look away from Rose Byrne's powerhouse performance in Physical Season 2 (https://theplaylist.net/physical-season-2-review-its-impossible-to-look-away-from-rose-byrnes-powerhouse-performance-20220525/): "Prickly protagonists are a dime a dozen on TV these days, continuing long after the reign of antiheroes like Tony Soprano, Don Draper, and Walter White ended," says Emma Fraser. "On Apple TV+’s dark comedy, Physical, Rose Byrne’s excellent performance as housewife-turned-aerobics maven Sheila Rubin runs the gauntlet of the ‘difficult woman’ archetype. In the second season, Sheila continues to be at war with herself and everyone who threatens her future exercise empire. As she edges closer to this dream, Sheila must overcome new and old obstacles that line the path to lifestyle guru success."
How Physical Season 2 explores the "societal flaw" of parenting in the 1980s (https://www.eonline.com/news/1333240/how-physical-explores-the-societal-flaw-of-parenting-in-the-80s)
"The first season received mixed reviews from critics, with several pointing out that Sheila’s voice-over narration, coupled with her character’s eating disorder, were anxiety-inducing and indulging in disordered eating stereotypes," says Kristen Lopez of the Apple TV+ dark comedy. "Season 2 feels like a course correction with a desire to embrace the 'autonomy' (creator Annie) Weisman found interesting about women and aerobics in the 1980s. Sheila is working to tailor herself into a lifestyle brand, but everyone else in her orbit is working on themselves, too. Rose Byrne was good before, but with stronger writing and a more confident character arc, she is utterly amazing in Season 2. Much of this is shunted to the latter half of the season, once Sheila enters a downward spiral that sees her seeking out fitness instructor Vinnie Green (Murray Bartlett) while contemplating recovery. But even within the first half of the season she’s wonderful. At one point, she’s doing an aerobic performance at a local fair, but ends up being laid low by a mysterious pain. Watching Byrne perform, a smile on her face, while her inner monologue tells her to dance through the pain is an effective summation of the season: Sheila has learned to push through the pain when she now doesn’t have to. She can be strong and confident without needing to hurt."
ALSO:
It's impossible to look away from Rose Byrne's powerhouse performance in Physical Season 2 (https://theplaylist.net/physical-season-2-review-its-impossible-to-look-away-from-rose-byrnes-powerhouse-performance-20220525/): "Prickly protagonists are a dime a dozen on TV these days, continuing long after the reign of antiheroes like Tony Soprano, Don Draper, and Walter White ended," says Emma Fraser. "On Apple TV+’s dark comedy, Physical, Rose Byrne’s excellent performance as housewife-turned-aerobics maven Sheila Rubin runs the gauntlet of the ‘difficult woman’ archetype. In the second season, Sheila continues to be at war with herself and everyone who threatens her future exercise empire. As she edges closer to this dream, Sheila must overcome new and old obstacles that line the path to lifestyle guru success."
How Physical Season 2 explores the "societal flaw" of parenting in the 1980s (https://www.eonline.com/news/1333240/how-physical-explores-the-societal-flaw-of-parenting-in-the-80s)