‘The Last Thing He Told Me’ series review: A brilliant Jennifer Garner stuck in an uninteresting thriller

Posted on:
Key Points

Take one unit of Gone Girland turn it on its head; squeeze out the social commentary and the thrilling tropes of a mystery film, stretch it out for seven episodes lasting roughly 30-odd minutes and you have a season of The Last Thing He Told Me ready to be consumed...

Hannah Hall (Jennifer Garner) who makes a living as an acclaimed woodturner in Sausalito, California, has a picture-perfect life living in a beautiful Venetian floating house she shares with her husband Owen (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau)..

The only discomfort in her life is her relationship with her stepdaughter Bailey (Angourie Rice), a typical Californian teenager with colourful streaks in her hair and passive aggression reserved for Hannah; while there is palpable tension between the duo, it never reaches a boiling point..

Watching Jennifer Garner and Angourie Rice play off of each others energy is a sight to behold and the actors add depth to the otherwise two-dimensional characters, succeeding in making the show interesting for a while..

Shot by an all-female team of directors starring a stellar cast, the show feels like it is just another avenue for the streaming giant to flex its budget. Nikolaj Coaster-Waldaus genius goes underutilised and the lack of curiosity to explore the characters on screen dulls the project..

You might be interested in

Jennifer Garner on playing a stepmother and learning to turn wood for ‘The Last Thing He Told Me’

12, Apr, 23

Jennifer Garner reveals the reason behind becoming an executive producer for ‘The Last Thing He Told Me’ and why she is a fan of the Laura Dave book

Masters of the Air: Check out Apple TV+ series’ plot, release schedule, episode count and more

25, Jan, 24

Masters of the Air, the latest series on Apple TV+, unfolds the gripping tale of the 100th Bomb Group during perilous bombing raids over Nazi Germany. The show explores the psychological toll on these men, their struggles and the high-altitude terror of combat.