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The Four Seasons (2025)

Thu May 22 2025


*The Four Seasons* — A Tender, Bittersweet Comedy About Friendship, Change, and Life at Midpoint**

*The Four Seasons* doesn’t explode off the screen. It doesn’t need to. In an age of high-stakes spectacles and nonstop noise, this grown-up ensemble dramedy dares to slow down and speak softly — and that’s exactly why it resonates so deeply.


A reimagining of the 1981 Alan Alda classic, this eight-episode series is the kind of rare television that feels both achingly intimate and quietly grand. It trades in truth, not tropes, bringing together a powerhouse cast — Tina Fey, Steve Carell, Colman Domingo, Will Forte, Kerri Kenney-Silver, and Marco Calvani — to explore the emotional aftershocks of a divorce within a lifelong friend group.

What follows is a meditation on middle age that never panders, never preaches. These are characters who feel lived-in, like people you know — or are. They laugh, wound each other, forgive, evolve. Watching them feels like eavesdropping on a dinner party you've been to before, with all the awkward grace and raw honesty that entails.


Carell’s portrayal of Nick captures a man at the crossroads of nostalgia and uncertainty, and Fey’s Kate is heartbreakingly complex — maternal, maddening, and magnetic. Forte and Kenney-Silver bring humor and soul, grounding their characters in a realism that’s often missing in stories about midlife.

But it’s Colman Domingo and Marco Calvani as Danny and Claude who deliver the most profound moments. Their relationship is beautifully ordinary — full of warmth, friction, and history. It’s a rare treat to see a same-sex couple portrayed not as commentary, but as people. Their love is woven into the fabric of the show without fanfare, and it’s all the more affecting for it.

There are no villains here, just people trying — often failing — to hold onto what matters as the years pull them in different directions. The writing is sharp, but it never cuts deeper than it needs to. The humor is gentle, rooted in the strange, funny sadness of real life. It’s a show that meets you where you are, especially if where you are is somewhere in between who you used to be and who you’re still becoming.

*The Four Seasons* is a gift — warm, wise, and wonderfully acted. It may not be loud, but it’s the kind of show that lingers long after the credits roll. If you've ever felt the shifting sands of long-term friendship, or stared down the mirror and wondered how you got here, this series will hold your heart in its hands — and maybe even help it heal.