![]() Information Services, Statistics, Records, Archives.Information and Communications Technology. ![]() HR, Training and Organisational Development.Health - Medical and Nursing Management.Facility / Grounds Management and Maintenance.And let’s not forget that this special took so long to bring about because various cast members had refused to participate in any kind of Friends reunion in the 17 years since the show ended. Celebrated human rights advocate Yousafzai with a raw turkey carcass on her head. ![]() Justin Bieber turning to the camera and saying “how you doing?”, for some reason, to 30 seconds of rapturous studio audience screams. I had visions of Becks teaching the now 50-year-old male Friends to play “soccer” while Phoebe gets in hot water with BTS for ripping off one of their songs. There were stars who had parts in the show, like Reese Witherspoon and Tom Selleck, but also, inexplicably Lady Gaga, Cara Delevingne, David Beckham and, perhaps most forebodingly of all, Malala Yousafzai.Īll conceivable reasons for having these people together in an episode of Friends were chilling. In addition to interviews with the central cast of the world’s most popular television programme, the long-awaited return of Friends would also treat us to a large number of celebrity guest appearances. “Friends: The Reunion” premieres May 27 on HBO Max.When details of the Friends reunion special came out a couple of weeks ago, they seemed to promise a car crash. Taped in April, the special covers considerable ground that could inspire various “Friends”-esque episode titles, but when all’s said and done, a few contenders pretty well apply: “The One That Celebrates the Show,” “The One That Promotes a Streaming Service,” “The One That Tries A Little Too Hard,” and at its best, “The One That Gives Fans A Lot of What They Wanted.” Given the hunger for content and recognizable titles, what might have been a Museum of Television and Radio retrospective has essentially been blown up into highly promotable ammunition for the streaming wars. Then again, “Friends: The Reunion” reflects the present media age as much as the mid-1990s period that birthed the show, when a network sitcom hit of this magnitude was still possible. (which, like CNN and HBO Max, is a unit of WarnerMedia). There are also notable oversights, such as the cast’s all-for-one, one-for-all approach when negotiating their contracts in the later seasons – a novel tactic, reflecting the program’s true ensemble nature, the actors’ solidarity, and the financial juggernaut that “Friends” became for NBC and production company Warner Bros. Instead, “Friends” made its players into stars, leaving them in a very different place when they signed off a decade after it began.Īt the same time, “The Reunion” labors in places to conjure a sense of fun, putting the actors through game-show-style trivia tests and enlisting celebrities whose involvement alternately feels arbitrary and unnecessary. “We didn’t want stars,” Crane recalls during the discussion about the casting process. The cast assembles in a familiar spot for 'Friends: The Reunion' (Terence Patrick). Other highlights include a taped piece in which producers Kevin Bright, Marta Kauffman and David Crane discuss casting the series – and all the serendipity that went into bringing these six actors together – and interviews with fans around the world, discussing what the show meant to them. It’s the closest to a scripted “Friends” reunion we’re apt to get, and fascinating to watch how seamlessly they appear to slide back into these roles, 17 years later. ![]() Some of those touches play better than others, with perhaps the best being snippets in which the stars – Jennifer Aniston, Courteney Cox, Lisa Kudrow, Matt LeBlanc, Matthew Perry and David Schwimmer – engage in table reads of old episodes, intercut with snippets of the originals. One by one, they return to the set and soundstage, exchanging slightly awkward hugs (welcome to the Covid era) and sharing memories.ĭirected and produced by “The Late Late Show with James Corden” producer Ben Winston, who recently did a fine job overseeing the Grammys, the special uses a mishmash of techniques to orchestrate and structure this walk down memory lane, including an in-person interview with Corden in front of an appreciative, socially distanced audience. “Friends” signed off in 2004, and part of the special’s appeal is simply seeing the band back together again, looking older (to varying degrees) and undeniably a whole lot richer. A valentine to fans, the nearly two-hour special is inevitably hard-pressed to justify the hype, working best when it lets the cast casually reminisce, while getting carried away with cameos, some of which, well, couldn’t be more random. ![]() Originally intended to help launch HBO Max, “Friends: The Reunion” finally hits the streaming service, in big, slightly bloated, unapologetically nostalgic form. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |