Follow the Murphy family back to the 1970s, when kids roamed wild, beer flowed freely and nothing came between a man and his TV.
Release date: Available now to stream on Netflix.
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Reviews:
- The Hollywood Reporter:
F Is for Family premieres on Dec. 18, and the first season is a tight six-episode chronicle of the minor and major cataclysms impacting the Murphy clan over a single fall setbacks and triumphs which, in isolation, are the stuff of standard family sitcoms, but which gain heft as they pile up and as continuity leads to real emotional payoffs by the end. It's a worthy companion to Netflix's BoJack Horseman, which also nimbly walks the line between light and dark in a very not-for-children way. - Variety:
The underlying idea behind F Is for Family, Netflixs latest animated comedy, is more appealing than the execution, which winds up feeling like a poor mans cross between King of the Hill and Mad Men. Set in 1973, the series created by comic Bill Burr and Michael Price (The Simpsons) derives much of its humor from the pre-political correctness of those times, as well as technological limitations (for those who remember when getting an answering machine was considered a big deal). The semi-serialized six-episode run has a dark, bittersweet quality, but despite some clever moments, F generally merits no more than a B. - NY Times:
At first, all that sets F Is for Family apart from its analogues is the rawness of the content. Few cable or streaming shows have applied their liberties to family sitcoms, and it lends a certain verisimilitude to arguments between a beer-drinking dad and a rebellious teenager. As you may have guessed, the F is not in fact only for Family.
The shows smarts creep up on you over the six-episode season.Like many period comedies, F Is for Family relies heavily on what-it-was-like-then references. But theyre well-curated ones that suggest that a young Mr. Burr was keeping assiduous records in his Super Friends notebook. When the Murphys shop for a TV (a color console the size of Skylab), the salesman promises to finance the sale at a point above prime: 26 percent! Props to any show that appreciates a good interest-rate joke. - SF Chronicle:
The show is funny, but a not-always-subtle flip side makes the jokes funny as well. Inevitably, we view it all through both our personal lens and through contemporary sensibilities. The Mohawk commercials, if aired today, would set off a social-media firestorm. At the same time, though, the Washington, D.C., pro football team continues to resist public pressure to change its name.
The more things change, as they say, the more we laugh, until we find ourselves asking if things have really changed that much.
Thats what keeps F Is for Family not only funny, but relevant as well. - NY Daily News:
F is for friggin' funny.
Bill Burr is a brilliant angry-man comic's comic, which means that other comedians respect his work. Now he hopes to redraw his childhood with a raw, no-holds-barred animated series on Netflix.
Creators: Bill Burr and Michael Price.
Cast:
Bill Burr as Frank Murphy
Laura Dern as Sue Murphy
Justin Long as Kevin Murphy
Haley Reinhart as Bill Murphy
Debi Derryberry as Maureen Murphy
Sam Rockwell as Victor
Promo photos: