Amazon Prime’s Anthology Modern Love Returns with a More Even and Relatable Season 2
Photo Courtesy of Amazon Prime
The charm of the New York Times’s “Modern Love” column is its slice-of-life, “truth is stranger than fiction” type of storytelling. From the page of a newspaper or the click of a link, the long-running Sunday Style column transports audiences around the world and immerses them in the best kinds of love stories: real ones.
When Amazon Prime adapted eight of those stories in 2019, much ado was made about the star power that participated. Adored actors like Anne Hathaway, Dev Patel, Tina Fey, and Catherine Keener brought their revered talents to the small screen for stories that depicted love in its many forms—familial, romantic, companionship—all exploring the depths of human emotion just 30 minutes at a time.
But Season 1 was also slightly uneven, with some stories feeling more cinematic than others. The strongest episodes were ones that featured an unusual relationship at its core: the rapport between a woman and her doorman, or between two widowers who bond over their love of running. Other stories left you feeling downright uncomfortable (the Julia Garner-led episode about a woman who tries to fill the dad-shaped void in her heart with an illicit relationship with her boss comes to mind) or even worse, bored (I love tennis, but was bored to tears by Tina Fey and John Slattery’s episode).
The second season’s greatest triumph is that it picks better stories to adapt. As a longtime reader of the column, there are always certain installments that stick with you longer than others, whether it’s because the experience is aspirational, educational, or downright recognizable. Season 1 tried too hard to pick unique stories, and it lost some of the relatability of showing a tale that everyone can see themselves in. Season 2 course-corrects and focuses on more universal experiences, like falling in love with your best friend, questioning your sexuality, wondering what it would be like to run into an ex on the street, or meeting a stranger in your own rom-com-style meet cute. Ultimately, the standout episodes in Season 2 are often the simplest.
Kit Harrington, Minnie Driver, Anna Paquin and other A-list stars again join the new season, but it’s Dominique Fishback (Judas and the Black Messiah), headlining the fourth episode, who steals the entire show. As a headstrong and determined girl who is secretly in love with her best friend but can’t get out of the friend zone, Fishback shows incredible restraint in her performance. Her face tells you everything: the years of yearning, the upset of rejection, the hope of possibility. That her episode plays like a rom-com is no accident, and she fully steps up to the plate as our romantic lead.