





http://www.hbo.com/girls/index.htmlHannah is seeing a new guy, but still feels responsible for Adam, her bed-ridden ex, as he recovers from the fateful accident that ended season one. Disappointed at work, the recently single Marnie needs the support of her best friend and former roommate, yet the distance between them seems greater than ever. Jessa returns from her honeymoon, ready to plant new ideas in Hannah's head. Newly experienced, Shoshanna struggles to navigate the challenges of a shaky relationship with Ray.
In addition to Dunham, who stars as Hannah, the cast of GIRLS includes Allison Williams ("American Dreams") as Marnie; Jemima Kirke ("Tiny Furniture") as Jessa; Zosia Mamet ("Mad Men") as Shoshanna; Alex Karpovsky ("Tiny Furniture") as Ray; and Adam Driver ("Lincoln") as Adam.
Guest stars on the second season of GIRLS include Chris Abbott ("Martha Marcy May Marlene") as Marnie's ex, Charlie; Andrew Rannells ("The New Normal") as Hannah's roommate, Elijah; Donald Glover ("Community") as Sandy; Chris O'Dowd ("Bridesmaids") as Jessa's husband, Thomas-John; Rita Wilson ("It's Complicated") as Marnie's mother; and Jorma Taccone ("Saturday Night Live") as artist Booth Jonathan, plus Rosanna Arquette ("Desperately Seeking Susan"), Carol Kane ("Annie Hall"), John Cameron Mitchell ("Hedwig and the Angry Inch") and Patrick Wilson ("Little Children") later in the season.
Premieres Sunday January 13th at 9, followed by Enlightened.
Season Two trailer #1, 2
Reviews
The Hollywood Reporter/Tim Goodman
Girls remains one of television’s greatest shows, one that seeks to document a specific time and place with specific types, done with unflinching honesty and humor earned from pathos and self-awareness. Here’s to one of television’s bravest, most entertaining lenses on a subculture.
- Andy Greenwald reviews S2 for Grantland
Hannah may still be a work in progress, but Girls no longer is. There's a dazzling confidence on display in these new episodes, matched by considerable craft. The abundance of bad choices being made on-screen shouldn't obscure all the good ones occurring off it. Dunham's writing and acting have improved immeasurably from her Tiny Furniture days, but the real leap forward, to my eyes, is her direction.
- Variety: Girls
Lena Dunham spurred predictable controversy with her election video for President Obama, which is appropriate, since her HBO series "Girls" is almost equally polarizing. There's no doubt the 26-year-old Dunham (who writes, directs and produces, as well as stars) is a formidable talent, though the hubbub surrounding the show's debut had as much to do with demography (Millennials!) and geography (Manhattan!) as merit. Season two finds more of the same, with strong moments surrounded by lots of irritating ones. As a critic, "Girls" is that odd duck that shouldn't be missed, and at times, can barely be watched.
- The Daily Beast: Season 2 of HBO’s Lena Dunham Comedy Soars
Those contradictions fuel the second season of Girls, which manages to be both salty and sweet, a perfect blend of disparate flavors. There’s a sense of aching hurt beneath the surface of the characters, as each grapples with emotional wounds, some imagined and some real. The petty squabbles, minor betrayals, and cutting comments reveal an immaturity to the characters that is realistically ugly yet compelling.
- Bloomberg News: ‘Girls’ Better Than Ever
The second season of Dunham’s comic drama, which chronicles four young women negotiating adulthood, love and Brooklyn, arrives with considerable expectations. Season One was a critical favorite that made instant celebrities of its young cast, especially Dunham, the show’s creator, chief writer and director, not to mention star. Based on the four half-hour episodes available for review, she’s done it again.
- National Post: Girls is back in town — and it’s not making any apologies
If you found yourself not wanting to spend time with these girls the first time around, you aren’t going to be assuaged much by their attitudes in the new episodes. The characters still make bad, impulsive decisions. They can be thoughtless and petty. Another thing Williams related last month: the show aspires to honesty, “and sometimes in an unglamourous way.” That’s about right. These characters are all flawed in their way. Aren’t we all, really?