2 reviews
Ranetki is a light soap opera about a group of Russian high school girls who form a rock band. These comments pertain to the first season only. Most of the story is either set in the high school or the apartments where the girls live with their parent(s). Aside from the girls, most of the other roles are classmates, parents, or school staff. The central character is Anya, who also adds some voice-over narration. Although the girls are band members, there is very little of their music in each episode.
This review is from an American's perspective, based on a viewing of the subtitled Season 1. Although the series has various shortcomings, I still found most episodes enjoyable and worthwhile. The five girls have different appealing personalities, all of the other regular cast members are likable, and some elements of Russian daily life seem exotic. There are a few sparkling lines of dialogue.
The series does have flaws, including production values reminiscent of U.S. 1960's TV shows. There are also too-lengthy transition shots, implausible audience exuberance at band performances, and contrived story arcs. This is not a series to be binge-watched over a weekend, but an episode per day works fine.
If Americans are considering watching this series, I would recommend first watching the web video of Ranetki performing the classic Shocking Blue song, "Venus", in English. That would be a nice introduction, instead of just viewing the series cold.
This review is from an American's perspective, based on a viewing of the subtitled Season 1. Although the series has various shortcomings, I still found most episodes enjoyable and worthwhile. The five girls have different appealing personalities, all of the other regular cast members are likable, and some elements of Russian daily life seem exotic. There are a few sparkling lines of dialogue.
The series does have flaws, including production values reminiscent of U.S. 1960's TV shows. There are also too-lengthy transition shots, implausible audience exuberance at band performances, and contrived story arcs. This is not a series to be binge-watched over a weekend, but an episode per day works fine.
If Americans are considering watching this series, I would recommend first watching the web video of Ranetki performing the classic Shocking Blue song, "Venus", in English. That would be a nice introduction, instead of just viewing the series cold.
My review is a little bit bias, but I wanted to comment because I saw another review from an American.
From my perspective as I watched the show when I was 7 years old, it brings so much memories from the Russian schools to the typical Russian household.
If you watched the series when you were little or if you are a Russian and you want to feel a bit nostalgic It's definitely a great watch.
Once you rewatch the series you will notice that they put a great effort to represent the different types os parent that there are and the relationships that the teenagers have with them and their friends
Im still on season 2 but it's so refreshing to rewatch the series.
From my perspective as I watched the show when I was 7 years old, it brings so much memories from the Russian schools to the typical Russian household.
If you watched the series when you were little or if you are a Russian and you want to feel a bit nostalgic It's definitely a great watch.
Once you rewatch the series you will notice that they put a great effort to represent the different types os parent that there are and the relationships that the teenagers have with them and their friends
Im still on season 2 but it's so refreshing to rewatch the series.