Product Description
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Crank landlords, nosy childhood friends, Brozilians, gym
bullies, sexy Halloween costumes, racist parrots, HAPPY ENDINGS.
The Complete Second Season offers more, more, more of the hit
series about six best friends navigating life and love in
Chicago's hip downtown. Alex (Elisha Cuthbert, TV's "24") and
Dave (Zachary Knighton, TV's "FlashForward") become real friends
again (with - whoops! - benefits?). Jane (Eliza Coupe, TV's
"Scrubs") hilariously tests out her maternal instincts while
hubby Brad (Damon Wayans Jr., TV's "The Underground") unwittingly
gets a "work wife." Max (Adam Pally) actually lands the perfect
boyfriend that the gang falls in love with. Meanwhile, "The Year
of Penny" is off to a rocky start as Penny (Casey Wilson, TV's
"Saturday Night Live") struggles with everything from birthday
curses to '80s-themed scavenger hunts. Another round of laughs,
please, for the funniest show on TV!
.com
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For a TV sitcom that only just squeaked out its pilot embryo and
made it into ABC's schedule as a midseason replacement, Happy
Endings certainly seems to be having a genuinely happy beginning
and middle. The Friends-like ensemble formula of three girls and
three guys living through their 30s in a Chicago-via-Hollywood
sound stage setting (one camera, no audience) hit its stride and
developed a following quickly when its first 13 episodes were
crammed on the air during spring and summer of 2011. Season two
unfolded at a more unhurried pace with a full batch of 21
episodes and a sigh of after the show was picked up for
the fall. That season three debuted in 2012 proved the show has a
sturdy back of support from fans and the network, and this
second-season set affirms how Happy Endings found its footing and
developed a distinctive voice that's mostly mundane but
unabashedly likable. The ensemble is cute, quirky, and easy on
the eyes, and if its attempted edginess doesn't slice very
deeply, at least it maintains enough upbeat patter to distract
from the generic mold. Eliza Coupe and Elisha Cuthbert play
sisters Jane and Alex, with Damon Wayans Jr. and Zachary Knighton
as Brad and Dave, their husband and jilted fiancé, respectively.
Rounding out the sextet is former SNLer Casey Wilson as the
perpetually single Penny, and Adam Pally as the slovenly, gay,
irresponsible, and oft-obnoxious Max. Playing mixed-up yet
well-bred characters who have been BFFs since college, all the
actors bring a mixture of stupidity, ego, and lovable wit. There
is good chemistry that circulates among them, which is why the
show was enough of a hit that we wanted to keep on hanging out
with them. The scripts don't go much deeper than problems with
Penny's new condo, Dave and Max's foibles as roommates, Jane and
Brad's implied bedroom kinks, and Alex's trouble keeping her
boutique from going bankrupt. The through line of Alex and Dave's
at-the-altar split and how they're back to being friends in the
aftermath isn't so much of a guiding premise in the season-two
episodes. Rather, all six of them rely on an equality of ribbing,
teasing, and falling back on the loving bond that makes their
connections thrive. Described that way, Happy Endings sounds kind
of like a gag-inducing torment to sit through. Thankfully, the
scripts and appealing personas rescue the routines and are
structured tightly with jokes that fall together with
intelligence and ditziness in equal measure. There's a nice
assortment of guest s with actors and comedians who duck in
at rtune moments. Matt Besser, Rob Riggle, Brian Austin
Green, Bobby Moynihan, Michael McKean, and Megan Mullally are
among the faces that augment the ensemble, as well as Brent
Musburger, Ed Begley Jr., Colin Hanks, and Fred Savage (a staff
director for the show), who all waltz through as versions of
themselves. The only extras in the three-disc set are about 20
minutes of outtakes and deleted scenes that end things nicely for
a spare, funny, innocuous show that does just fine on its own.
--Ted Fry