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In April, it became clear that the Norwegian series "Maniac" becomes the Netflix series, with the director of True Detective Cary Fukunaga behind the levers and stars of "Superbad" Jonah Hill and Emma Stone in the lead
Comedian Espen Lervaag wrote the original series with Håkon Bast Mossige, and both had roles in the Norwegian version that aired on TV 2 Fall 2015. The channel has changed several times. 80,000 per episode.
The series also did not have good reviews, with a tree on the cube in the movie's font and a regular slaughter in NIGHT & DAY.
However, this did not prevent Netflix from producing its own version of the comedy drama. Yesterday, Netflix released a trailer for the series, as well as a detailed description of the program. The first date is 21 September.
The trailer shows Jonah Hill and Emma Stone sitting one in front of each other at a table, seemingly absorbed by intense busting competition. In the background, we hear the voice of Justin Theroux, who is also part of the cast in the form of star.
– Sinnsyk
The sci fi io 9 calls the trailer "disturbing" and writes that the series looks like a "surreal thriller".
– There is not much, but that's enough to annoy our interests, it's about the little trailer
Refinery29 calls the trailer "crazy and incredibly ambiguous" under the title "I know less about" Maniac "Netflix after watching the trailer that I did before."
The article continues under the announcement
– If we know the director of True Detective Cary Fukunaga, the series will be darker than a panther at one time. power failure
– This is not a series to see alone.
"Maniac plays in a world similar to ours, in no time different from the one we live in", says the official description of Netflix.
"Two strangers, Annie Landsberg (Emma Stone) and Owen Milgrim (Jonah Hill), for various reasons, are attracted to a mysterious medicine study.Andy is unsatisfied and without direction in life, repairing the broken relationship with her Owen has been living with a diagnosis of unconfirmed schizophrenia all her life. "
Promises radical new treatment – A series of tablets that, according to the inventor, can cure all emotional disorders, sorrow to mental illness – shoot both in a three-day study. . It is believed that they will not experience any unforeseen side effects and that all your problems will be solved forever.
However, we do not think so, we will believe Netflix.
– The premise has the thought of going to the movie "Eternal Sunshine in a Flawless Mind", but with some kind of psychedelic style of the 80s. Maybe it also takes a little inspiration of the horror movie "Cure for Wellness", written Slashfilm.com
– Feeling quite unique and very exciting, the blog continues [19659008] – Room for improvement
Netflix calls the series a black comedy.
– However, from the description and the trailer it's hard to see where the humor comes from, Refinery29 writes.
who switched to TV 2 in 2015 and 2016, speaks of Espen, who seems to live every day new revolutionary adventures. But everything happens inside his own head – in fact, he is confined to a psychiatric hospital.
Episodes pass between the hospital and the imaginary adventure of the patient, writes Steve Greene in IndieWire
a world after another, with fictitious editions of. themselves and the hospital staff in the lead roles. In each episode, he must perform a task in a fantastic universe that he can see. At the hospital, doctors and nurses see Espen as "laughing" on sinks, "pulling" with hair dryers or endless fight scenes.
Rumors have been circulating for a long time on the Web
and television actors have been diluted for a while now, but it is still surprising to see two of these big names in a Netflix production , Rolling Stone wrote in January.
The so-called "remakes" are rarely created simply because one thinks a new version might be better than the original, says Greene. He believes, however, that the Netflix version of "Maniac" may be the exception to confirm the rule.
– There is room for improvement after the original Norwegian series, he writes
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