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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 125,621
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https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/tv...ew-1235111020/
The 1970s-set drama, created by Ellen Rapoport starring Jake Johnson as an adult magazine publisher and Ophelia Lovibond as a feminist as they team up to launch the first erotic title for women, unfolds in the gap "between lofty ideas and base desires, between firmly held values and sometimes inconvenient lived realities," says Angie Han. "On paper, that might sound as stuffy as, well, a debate over whether erections can be feminist. But in practice, the HBO Max comedy strikes that balance more confidently than any of its characters manage to, serving up a breezy romp that also manages to be shrewd in the ways it interrogates sex." Han adds: "Minx‘s narrative juice may come from the differences between Joyce and Doug, but creator Ellen Rapoport wisely writes them as full, flawed characters rather than stereotypes or talking points. Joyce is a politically progressive liberal, and also a bit of a sheltered prude; she might try to avoid being overly judgmental, but Lovibond expresses her reflexive discomfort with her more sexually liberated coworkers through her fidgety body language. Doug is neither a total sleaze nor a total saint, but a business-savvy charmer who has his own reasons for betting on Joyce. Slick and ambitious, he has little in common with the hangdog slackers Johnson’s perfected in roles like New Girl — but retains just enough of that affability to make Doug hard not to fall for." ALSO:
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