Anne Hathaway and Tina Fey look for Modern Love in the trailer for their new Amazon series
Aux Features TVThe news is typically about sadness and misery, which was presumably a factor in The New York Times’ decision to launch “Modern Love,” a weekly series of essays from different writers about love and romance and stuff that’s either happy and heartwarming or sad in a way that still kind of makes you feel happy (or the other way around). Later this year, Amazon will launch a TV show featuring eight adaptations of essays from The New York Times’ “Modern Love” archives, with a whole bunch of famous people stepping into replace the (probably) not-famous people who the stories were originally about. As seen in this trailer, those famous people include Anne Hathaway, Sofia Boutella, Tina Fey, Andy Garcia, John Slattery, Dev Patel, Shea Whigham, Cristin Milioti (who knows a thing or two about love stories that make you sad, but her story was sad in a bad way).
The Hollywood Reporter notes that the writers behind the essays adapted for the show were compensated in some way, with some of the talent choosing to make them directly involved in Amazon’s version (Hathaway apparently talked “extensively” to the original writer of her episode’s story, while Milioti did not). Modern Love the show will premiere on Amazon on October 18.
11 Comments
Love stories for the bourgeois. Comedy for classists. Tina Fay found a perfect vehicle for her worldview in adapting this.
Tina Fey slowly working her way through the cast of Mad Men. Slattery looked pretty good in that short tennis clip though, I wonder if he gives lessons?
Liz Lemon and Glenn would make a good match.
Isn’t this just basically Love, American Style?
If it doesn’t feature a brass bed or doorway beads, then no.
Love, American Style made Easy?
I’m thinking it’s more a painfully-longer version of the “Love, Actually” genre of cloyingly awful “All-Star Holiday Movie”.
I would honestly rather watch “Love American Style”. That at least would be entertainingly bad.
This trailer says “Inspired by 8 true stories”But then lists just 7 stars.
Why?
Because “there’s another character that’s just as important … New York City.”
Looks like Hathaway went overboard with the Juviderm.
Cristin Milioti (who knows a thing or two about love stories that make you sad…)Or love stories that are just infuriating.