http://www.hbo.com/enlightened/index.htmlCreated by Mike White and Laura Dern, season one of ENLIGHTENED told the story of self-destructive corporate executive Amy Jellicoe (Dern), who had a spiritual awakening after a career-destroying meltdown. Though determined to live a more enlightened existence, her new outlook only wreaked more havoc, both at home and at work.
In season two, Amy redoubles her efforts to gather evidence against Abaddonn with the support of Tyler (White), her meek IT ally, and enlists journalist Jeff Flender in her cause. Meanwhile, Amy's ex, Levi, continues to struggle with rehab, and it remains to be seen if he will embrace recovery and return as the man she always wanted him to be.
Mike White wrote all eight episodes of the second season of ENLIGHTENED and directed four, with Nicole Holofcener, Todd Haynes, James Bobin and David Michod each directing one episode. Music by Mark Mothersbaugh
http://www.thefutoncritic.com/news/...n-13-exclusively-on-hbo-701112/20121212hbo01/
30 minutes - Drama/Dark Comedy - Sundays at 9:30 PM on HBO
Season Two Trailer # 1, [URL="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9bd1NrADVqw"]2
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The complete first season now available on DVD/Blu-ray.
Starring
Laura Dern as Amy Jellicoe
Diane Ladd as Helen Jellicoe
Luke Wilson as Levi
Mike White as Tyler
Sarah Burns as Krista
Timm Sharp as Dougie
Bayne Gibby as Connie
Jason Mantzouka as Omar
Jon Shere as Louis
Amy Hill as Judy Harvey
Michaela Watkins as Janice
Chip Esten as Damon Manning
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Initially opening to a lukewarm, hindering on mixed reception, (and through that a reprehensible lack of buzz and viewership) Enlightened debuted as if in secret, lost amongst the dozens of new fall shows. With its designed format more akin to a connected set of short stories, each episode touching on a specific theme with shifting perspectives and a variety of tonal disparity, it demonstrated a refusal to fit into any sort of strict mold, making for what some considered an incredibly challenging viewing experience and for others, an even richer one. For the critics who liked the pilot, -- and the little of us here on GAF and elsewhere that similarly stuck around, Enlightened rewarded that loyalty by revealing itself as one of most surprisingly unique, honest and emotionally affecting seasons of television created. As better captured through these quotes by Matt Zoller Seitz & James Poniewozik:
"The series manages to be corrosive and compassionate at the same time. Amy is our heroine and surrogate. She narrates parts of the series in voice-over, often accompanied by highly subjective camerawork with first-person point-of-view shots and expressionist slow-motion. The bits of the series that Amy narrates are first-person subjective. We’re seeing the world, and Amy, through her perceptions; they’re colored by her experience at the colony and by the supplemental reading she’s being doing since she returned to Los Angeles, went back to work with a demotion, and moved in with her aging mom (Diane Ladd, Dern’s real-life mom). The rest of the show could be described as third-person limited. We’re seeing Amy — and all the other characters, including her mother, her still-drug-addled ex, Levi (Luke Wilson), and her new boss, the socially inept, profane, hot-tempered Dougie (Timm Sharp) — from a detached point-of-view, one that conveys the fullness of the characters’ self-flattering delusions even as it looks through them and sees something like the truth about them. I dislike the self-help phrase “tough love,” but it fits here. Judging from what’s on-screen, there’s no doubt that White and Dern appreciate and empathize with all of these characters even though they don’t cut them so much as a millimeter of slack. What we’re seeing isn’t a cliched “edgy” indie film worldview — a variation of “I love humanity; it’s people I can’t stand.” “Enlightened” is richer than that. It’s merciless yet somehow not misanthropic. The tone is about as warm as can be without turning gooey." -- Matt Zoller Seitz, Salon
“Personal growth isn't easy, so maybe it's fitting that a series about it shouldn't be either. At first blush, Amy Jellicoe (Laura Dern) is easier to gawk at than to like. A corporate executive who suffers a nervous breakdown after an affair, she has an epiphany at a pricey therapy retreat, then returns to her old life, demoted at the office, living with her mom (Dern's actual mother, Diane Ladd) and trailing passive-aggressive spirituality. At first, Amy seems so deluded and self-righteous that you want to smack her into a shivasana pose. But Enlightened, written by Mike White (The Good Girl), isn't interested in mocking easy New Age targets or valorizing Amy. Instead, it takes her journey seriously, if sometimes seriously enough to laugh at it. Subtle and gorgeously directed (by guests including Jonathan Demme, Miguel Arteta and Nicole Holofcener), it's a darkly funny, empathetic story of a flawed woman learning that sometimes a journey of a thousand miles begins with a good sharp kick in the ass.” – James Poziewoznik, TIME http://www.time.com/time/specials/packages/article/0,28804,2101344_2101126_2101136,00.html
As evidenced through its distinct style and dangerously low viewership, the show has proven to be a polarizing one - but should it continue offering the same quality work going forward in its second season, I believe it leads the way in reinforcing for HBO and itself, that brilliant, truly unconventional cable programming still has a place to call home; where it can exist along side the more commonly explicit & extravagant efforts by being comparatively "small" and restrained, but equally if not more ambitious.
*it goes without saying that or a better indication of the series, actually watching will do more for it than anything else - so check out a collection of scenes I’ve gathered from the first season below and hopefully, they'll be enough to make you want to catch up and experience the show fully*
Videos
I Will Change
"I'm Trapped"
Picture Someone Else's Life
Broken Marriage
There she is
The Mother is a Child Too
Let it go
Consider Helen
"Burn it Down"
Critic Pieces (season 2 reviews to be added as they come in)
Washington Post: HBO’s ‘Enlightened’: A triumphant comeuppance in cubicle land
It’s just you and me and one other guy, who called to say he’s running late, so let’s go ahead and start the meeting of People Who Really Love “Enlightened,” and hope some others show up.
This HBO exercise in exquisite portraiture (I still won’t call it a comedy) returns Sunday night, and it is the most hauntingly nuanced and carefully written show currently on TV. Yes, I already know “Enlightened” is not your cup of green tea, because so many of you have already said so: It’s too slow. Nothing happens. It’s depressing.
It is depressing. It is a real downer, and too many viewers have a bias against that sort of thing. We’ll watch countless Prohibition-era thugs get shot in the head, or detectives examine rape-kit results, and of course we’ll watch a couple hundred people die violently in the “Homeland” finale, but somehow “Enlightened” is too ooky and dark. In its first season, something like 200,000 people tuned in from week to week; even for HBO, where patience is a virtue, that’s the ratings equivalent of a party no one came to.
For those of you who watch it anyhow (a.k.a. my real friends), a superior season awaits: “Enlightened” comes through with a triumphant eight-episode arc that broadens its characters, quickens the pace and finishes strong.
Vulture: Enlightened's Heroine Is Still Deranged, But Not Totally Wrong
Remarkably, Enlightened doesn’t adopt a morally superior tone to any of this. Things are never either-or. They’re always both-and. Amy is a deeply damaged and irritating woman. Her grandiose voice-over reveries are filled with rehab platitudes and portentous images that suggest a Los Angeles tourism ad directed by Terrence Malick. She’s so narcissistic that when she grins at the targets of her goodness, she seems to be admiring her reflection in their pupils. But despite her borderline derangement, she’s right about Abaddonn and right to be mad that no one cares. “I’m just tired of feeling small,” Amy says. Isn’t everyone?
The Nation: Everybody Should Be Watching HBO's Enlightened
...This can make the show something of an acquired taste. A couple of friends I’ve recommended it to come back confused. Are they supposed to “like” Amy? Sometimes she has tantrums; sometimes her social skills are off. She doesn’t really obey the conventions of melodrama, in seeming neither tragic nor heroic in her crusades. And in that she is actually more like a real human being, really trying to Do The Right Thing by her family, by her friends, and by the world, and finding that in fact the path to doing just that is not as clear as it seems.
Oddly, that suddenly makes the show much like Girls, doesn’t it? But Hannah Horvath and Amy are very different people. “The Right Thing” is not of any concern to Girls. The world outside Hannah and her friends barely exists for them, and while Girls does poke fun at that, it also doesn’t present any alternative viewpoint. Enlightened’s Amy was once, it seems, more like this, more wrapped up in her own life, and less prone to consider people outside her immediate vicinity. The show is about her process of opening herself up, one which runs in a less-than-ruler-straight line.
It’s a tiresome trope to hold a television character up as a “role model” – Amy’s fictional, after all. But watching White dramatize this process, which he has occasionally suggested is related to his own (he has told interviewers he had a similar breakdown in 2004), does inspire, at least a little. All those movies about the corporate whistleblowers and activists and their heroics, they seem so righteous, so convinced from the start that what they are doing is right and good. I mean, what they are doing is right and good. But the path to doing something that matters to a world wider than your own, well, it should involve a lot of self-questioning. Particularly if, like Amy, your day job ends up being more sinister than the banal, sunny corporate-speak that you’d been brought up your whole life to believe in.
The premiere is tonight, on HBO, following Girls, wherever you are.
Bloomberg: Fine ‘Enlightenment’
If the show’s under-watched debut followed Dern’s office drone Amy Jellicoe as she reassembled herself following an emotional collapse, the sophomore season suggests that the abrasive, aphorism-spouting do-gooder might have a firmer take on contemporary reality than anyone suspects.
Salon: Is “Enlightened” quietly the best show on TV? The HBO series brilliantly satirizes the New Age self-actualization movement and the hell of corporate America
San Francisco Chronicle- No sophomore slumps for the daring women on HBO
Self-delusion can grow fairly tiresome, in life and on TV, but what makes Amy sympathetic is that even though she almost convinces us at times that her personal fairy tale actually makes sense, we are always aware of her basic decency and, more important, her vulnerability.
Amy and Hannah are singular blends of driven focus and inner doubts. Hannah mines her doubts for strength and determination as she seeks the truths of her life, while Amy battles her doubts to re-enforce her resolve. For viewers, the results are the same: Two fascinating and complicated modern women, making their distinctive mark in the world, whether the world knows it or not.
Ken Tucker/Entertainment Weekly: 'Enlightened' season premiere review: Watch this Laura Dern show tonight, please
There’s a lot on TV tonight — the Golden Globes, new episodes of The Good Wife and Downton Abbey, the season premiere of Girls — but let me urge you to try and catch the second-season premiere of HBO’s Enlightened. This half-hour co-created by co-stars Laura Dern and Mike White is extraordinarily good: funny and moving and constantly surprising.
Huffington Post TV/Maureen Ryan: 'Enlightened' Review: A Brilliant, Must-See Return For The HBO Gem
"Enlightened" is a show that trusts itself to make small gestures and spend time on quiet observation, and it ultimately succeeds at one of the hardest but most important things any story should do: It brings you inside in the emotional state of the people at the heart of the tale. With its spare visual style and its meditative aesthetic, "Enlightened" evokes a feeling of not-quite-resigned aspiration, a lyrical, guarded sense of possibility. The show is suffused with the sense that what you want is just out of reach and that the dream could be yours if you just wanted it a little more intensely.
Enlightened: Salon: The Best New Show No One But You, If You Are Bothering to Read This Post, Is Watching
The beguiling tough love of “Enlightened”
TIME: “Consider Helen,” one of the best episodes of TV I’ve watched all year, is not likely to unpolarize anyone. But it was also the show’s finest expression yet of the philosophy that the best way to self-understanding is empathy for others.
Tim Goodman: "Watching a series like Enlightened makes you happy there's a home for shows that don't fit the mold -- places like HBO (in this case), Showtime, FX, AMC, etc. With its offbeat sense of humor and unwillingness to be just funny when there are so many other emotions to explore, Enlightened feels like it was pitched as a comedy then tapped into those little, personal and private moments people have when they don't fit in -- or even feel like they have a purpose -- then got shot and directed like an indie film."
The Awl: 'Homeland' And 'Enlightened': Women On The Verge Of Nervous Breakthroughs
ThinkProgress: Enlightened,’ And The Power And Danger Of Organizing
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