Entertainment
One Day reviewThe perfect Netflix series, a tear-jerker of Titanic proportions 5 stars


By Kajal Sharma - 16 Feb 2024 04:15 PM
mOne Day Review: Ambika Mod and Leo Woodall star in Netflix's achingly epic romantic drama, which is about as perfect as Valentine's Day and programming #039 can get. It's rare to find a TV show — or any filmed entertainment — that can capture the euphoria and heartbreak of young love with equal grace. Netflix's new romance series One Day does that and more. Containing 14 episodes of varying length, it follows two characters - bubbly Emma and impetuous Dex - through two decades of joys and sorrows, small victories and terrible losses. It is dizzying and curious, but also poetic and profound. One Day can be the perfect TV show in its own way. Emma and Dex meet for the first time at the college prom, young adults on the cusp of new adventures. He is a campus sweetheart, and his leg exposes the hinterland of old money. But he is more cynical and comes from the working-class city of Leeds. Getting Dex's attention might be the biggest validation any girl gets in college, and when he tells Emma off on their last day together, she can't help but be suspicious. He's not the kind she usually goes for. But in the spirit of YOLO that predated the production of the expression, she loves him.. What happens is a debut episode so Before Sunrise-coded that Richard Linklater would consider filing a lawsuit or flush with thanks.
However, Emma and Dex always maintain a platonic relationship, preferring talk to copulation even when they split ways, in contrast to Celine and Jesse. However, their emotional bond is strong enough for them to swear to keep in contact. From 1988 until 2007, One Day visits them once a year, every year. The date, July 15, seems completely arbitrary at first. However, anyone who have read the original novel by David Nicholls or even seen the widely forgotten film adaptation will recognise its devastating ending. When she tells him on their first date that she wants to "change the world" and when she quotes her favourite passage from Tess of the d'Urbervilles by Thomas Hardy, about a day that waits "sly and unseen," ready to pounce on unwary people, there's idealism in her eyes. The episodic format of the show emphasises Emma and Dex's development despite a number of significant life events occurring off-screen. A few years following college, Dex stumbles into a position as a television presenter and turns into an annoying minor star, while Emma gives up on her ambition to become a writer and takes a work at the "second-worst Mexican restaurant in all of the UK." It changes how they see themselves and each other.