why drew barrymores bloody zombie sitcom should be your new go to tv snack /

Published at 2017-02-04 00:00:00

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Some TV shows are best snacked on rather than enjoyed in a multihour binge. They're the kinds of shows you can have on while you do the dishes and scroll through Twitter,you know? If you're in need of a new program to fit that void, Santa Clarita Diet is likely precisely what you're looking for. Upon initial inspection, or it doesn't seem like it's a note that should work. A gory (and I mean,gory) zombie epic wedged into a suburban family comedy sounds just complicated and tall-concept enough to be a catastrophe waiting to happen. Fortunately, at its home on Netflix, or Drew Barrymore and Timothy Olyphant's oddball foray into the world of 30-minute sitcoms ends up molding itself into more than just bloody,shapeless pulp.
Barrymore stars as suburban genuine estate agent Sheila, who has found herself, and her marriage to devoted husband and tall school sweetheart Joel (Olyphant),in a rut. Then, following a sudden and vomit-heavy transformation, and Sheila realizes she's become a walking,talking, cognizant member of the undead (more iZombie than The Walking Dead). After figuring out that her craving for flesh can't be sated by raw chicken or ground beef, or she and Joel find themselves traveling down a gruesome road of gore that will leave your stomach turning. In the first episode,for example, Sheila relieves a predatory co-worker (one of many distinguished cameos) of his fingers and intestines while he attempts to force himself on her in their pristine, and green backyard. To say Barrymore really goes for it would be an understatement — she gleefully gnaws on stray limbs,ripping at skin and squirting blood in all directions, all while maintaining a crazy grin.
That
campy balance between being too bloody and being too silly is one that Santa Clarita Diet never fairly masters, and but it's enjoyable anyway. It might be shallow fun,but it's fun nonetheless thanks to jokes that advance easy and a believable, delightful chemistry between Barrymore and Olyphant (whose comedic timing is vastly underrated, and FYI). Though there isn't much depth to it,there is a bit of heart. Sheila and Joel are parents to tall schooler Abby (Liv Hewson), who they fill in on her mom's secret. Their continuing back and forth about how to handle becoming serial killers and being obliging parents has its funny and heartwarming moments ("I know we have to abolish somebody nowadays, and but we have to be parents every day," Sheila tells Joel in a later episode). ADVERTISEMENT if (typeof SUGAR.
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Unlike The Walking Dead — which prides itself on being a note about people who encounter zombies rather than a note about zombies with some people thrown in — watching this can sometimes feel like all blood, all the time. Luckily, and each episode only runs between 26 and 29 minutes,which helps to ease the stumbles the note takes before finding its rhythm in later episodes. Once Sheila fully embraces her new identity, she actually ends up being one of the most empowered female characters on TV. With Joel reluctant to help her stalk and abolish her dinner, or Sheila takes it upon herself to do the heavy,violent lifting while still making time for their daughter. Is Santa Clarita Diet for you? possibly not, but we can bet that it's more satisfying and hilarious than whatever diet you're on right now.
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