Flowers (TV Series 2016–2018) Poster

(2016–2018)

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8/10
Stick to the First Series
deepfrieddodo1 January 2021
Series One:

Bleak black humour at it's brilliant best, the first season of Flowers is absolutely wonderful. It is a very dark comedy that will not be appreciated by everyone, it's the type that the British do very well, but if this is what you're into it'd be difficult to find something better.

Firstly, casting is simply brilliant. Barratt is simply fantastic in his role as the struggling father, you feel for him constantly and his attempts to spare his family his pain. Coleman, as always, is perfect as the starkly contrasting wife, and the twins each fit into the disfunctional family excellently. Each main character has their own arc and develop well in the space of a few short episodes. The growth is often, if not always, in a dark light, but the laughs throughout are plenty.

Sharpe clearly wrote himself the most lovable character as Shun, the Japanese illustrator who'd do anything for the Flower family. A brilliant source for jokes, or light relief from heavy subjects, it's impossible not to like him. However, when it comes to his own demons, these are by far the most powerfully emotional, simply brilliant.

The additional character of 'George' seemed unnecessary, it's an outlandish personality yes but just so dislikeable. He and ' Abigail' didn't truly bring anything to the show, they interlinked with a couple of the arcs but really nothing important. However this would be my only critism, the visuals, dialogue, and everything else were perfect.

Series One: 9/10

Series Two:

Where did it all go wrong? The second series is just infinitely worse as it loses any sense of humour, or emotion, or relatability. Focus switches heavily to 'Amy', who was a great character in the first series. This time around, it's just too heavy and dives so far into lunacy that it loses any sense of comedy. The Baumgaetner arc is dull and pointlessly surreal, and wastes so much time that it's almost as if the other characters' developments no longer matter, which is a shame because 'Donald' gets given another dimension.

Acting wise there can still be no complaints, but the weird sense of relation you may have gained with each character is lost here. Laughs come up every so often, but not much. Even 'Shun' is taken away, as he turns to drink. I imagine this could have been a really great story if the surrounding context was better in any way, the same could be said for 'Maurice'. The series does ditch the previously pointless characters, but they are replaced to a lesser extent.

In all fairness the final two episodes are better, particularly the last, which is beautiful. But this is only because it's more of a prequel/flashback, and the emotion and innocence of Shun is explored.

However, it's disappointing that Flowers turned out so differently in the second season, no element of comedy was there. The ending is lovely in a way, but I'm not sure it makes up for the rest.

Series Two: 6/10
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9/10
One of the Best Shows on TV
johnbell-2467326 April 2016
Warning: Spoilers
Yep. If not the best. It's been so long since a TV show has had all of the right components and combines them perfectly to create this masterpiece; The show revolves around an over-arching theme of mental illness which makes for uncomfortable yet gripping viewing. From attempted suicide to death, Flowers guarantees laughter even when you know you shouldn't.

Flowers also has a tiny cast of characters which works as an incredible advantage. All of the characters appear to be very one dimensional such as (Shun the comedy relief) but as the series progresses we see each and every character develop at a remarkable pace yet non seems rushed. The strong character development is matched by pristine casting choices; Olivia Colman, Julian Barrat and Sophia Di Martino all preform perfectly in their respective roles to create a constant atmosphere of unease and tension.

Aiding the atmosphere is the choice of music for the show. Screeching sounds throughout reflect the tone of the show and never let you forget that this is not a normal family.

Despite all of the gloom. (I think) Flowers is a wonderful comedy that mixes humble, horrifying and hilarious moments to craft one of the best TV shows.
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8/10
Heartbreaking
djeestout-1263827 April 2019
Warning: Spoilers
This is sort of a beautifully-told story that almost cancels itself out by turning into a most heartbreakingly sad story that is hard to watch in the second season. I watched it to the end, because of its excellent story-telling, while hoping it would pull itself out of the bleakness into which it had ground itself, but ended up watching it with one eye painfully squinting when Shun began to fall apart. He tried so hard, but the characters of the Flowers family were so self-absorbed, he never had a chance with his adopted family. The story ended up being about Shun, and thus was a tragedy. Not sure how I feel.
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10/10
A sublimely dark fairytale
Benski204628 April 2016
Remember when Channel 4 was home to edgy, intelligent comedy, subversive music, cult films and late-night, stoner-vision staples such as Vidz? Me too. Albeit through a hazy vignette next to memories of carving flints and ducking pterodactyls.

All the more surprising then that Channel 4 should spring Flowers on us. At first glance a sort of grim fairytale about a dysfunctional family living in darkest Surrey, but also an often genuinely funny and heartfelt character study which has had me both laughing out loud and tearing up more often than I'd want to admit.

The characters are of course what drive Flowers. Julian Barratt, as a depressed children's author, gives every bit as fantastic a performance as you'd expect, while a special mention deserves to go to lesser known Sophia Di Martino, whose portrayal of creepy, socially isolated daughter, Amy, could've been one-dimensional, but is played with an almost profound depth and sensitivity, and soon becomes someone you genuinely find yourself caring about.

Will Sharpe's writing displays a maturity beyond his years, along with a wonderfully surreal and original sense of humour.

Of course not everyone will warm to it. It starts off depicting a failed suicide attempt – clearly its main intent is not winning over Daily Mail readers or the easily offended. It pulls no punches in its depiction of depression, but also manages to find a strange beauty in it. It's somewhat near-the-knuckle in Sharpe's depiction of his own Japanese heritage, and may even raise a few eyebrows with its tongue-in-cheek conflating of "feminist" and "lesbian".

But the whole thing is sewn together with such rare intelligence and sensitivity, not to mention beautiful cinematography, that you never get the feeling it's opting for cheap laughs.

There's only one more episode to go, and I'm already missing it; looking to re-watching it; and annoyingly and incessantly pushing it on family and friends.
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10/10
Jaw-drop amazing and insanely brilliant
drbaulk30 May 2016
I'm not sure if this was written specifically with Olivia Colman and Julian Barratt in mind - but they are utterly brilliant and perfect for their roles.

Dealing with dark themes throughout but in an uplifting way that I can't begin to explain, there are crazy surreal moments, tones of infinite sadness, rhythms of tragedy, but also creepy awkwardness and plenty of laughs as well.

The whole story is brilliantly written and directed, and Will Sharpe is an inspiration. I'm speechless at how good this is. Drop whatever you are doing and what the whole thing in one go.
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10/10
Brilliant, absolutely brilliant.
corrie-2922116 May 2016
If you are looking for something different, that is at the same time funny, bizarre and sad - then this is for you. I found myself shaking my head, crying and laughing out loud, sometimes in one single scene. While dealing with multiple issues including severe depression, the writer draws you into the lives of the characters. Where in the first episode you feel some annoyance with them, as the story develops, you develop a sense of sympathy and understanding towards each of the characters. I was so impressed by Will Sharpe that I looked him up and will make and effort to see more of his work. Truly a brilliant mind in my opinion and I have to add that it was as if the parts were written for these particular actors. However as per some of the other reviews, it is not for everybody.
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10/10
Brilliant
dougieharley29 April 2016
This is a great dark comedy about an extremely dysfunctional and odd family. It has an honest look on depression and how it effects yourself and the people around you with a humorous twist.

Anyone who comes from a dysfunctional family (which I'm sure is most) or has even had depression I'm sure could relate to the struggles and sometimes comedic goings on within.

The cast are all excellent and Will Sharpe himself plays a great part in uplifting some of the darkest moments throughout. Olivia Coleman and Julian Barratt are incredible.

I'm hooked and I think Will Sharpe as a writer will go far.
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10/10
Refreshing and brilliant
craigrichardlowis26 April 2016
Dark, seemingly depressing too at first. However, the masterful use of the surreal and the perverse is a delight. This is Olivia Coleman at her very best, playing a wife suppressing so much turmoil that she's plainly the more troubled of the couple - in spite of Julian Barrett's superb portrayal of a suicidal husband. The addition of two deeply troubled but intriguingly bizarre "children" (living at home at 25) makes for even better viewing. Each twist of the story and development of the plot leaves me all the more enraptured - rare indeed in any TV comedy.

This is the sort of TV that only gets made when TV commissioners stop thinking about viewing figures and pandering to the hoi polloi , and instead go for something profound and amusing. The BBC should really be in the vanguard of such things, but they're always too busy in internal politics and demographical soul-searching these days. Thank the Good Lord for Channel 4.
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10/10
Superb dark comedy drama
salpensom29 April 2016
It appears, from the reviews posted so far, that "Flowers" is a bit like Marmite. You are going to have to try it to see for yourself.

I'm firmly in the "I love it!" camp. Beautifully shot, great acting (with standout performance by Julian Barratt), very funny and heartbreaking (in a non-cheesy way).

Although all the characters seem utterly bonkers, we can all recognise their character traits as our own. We are just better at holding it in, and pretending to ourselves that it is not there. At all.

Although this works as a stand alone, it would be a travesty if it wasn't commissioned for a second series.
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6/10
Promising UK cringe comedy jumps the kipper in the second season
The_late_Buddy_Ryan21 July 2019
Elevator pitch: Depressed Edward Gorey character, his needy, neglected wife (Olivia Colman!) and their two failed-to-launch adult children live in a remote woodsy area, amidst no-less-peculiar neighbors. You'll recall that Will Sharpe's Sherlock certainly seemed to be bipolar, with touches of OCD and Tourette's. Here we have all that and more, including maybe schizophrenia and being congenitally "so rude that you're doomed to die a virgin," as one of the younger Flowerses says to her brother. The one attractive, normal-seeming character, who's being pursued by both of them, is really just the best at keeping her issues hidden; she gets written out of the show pretty quickly.

The start-and-stop plot is propelled along by several stunted artistic projects--the latest of Mr Flowers's Snickety children's books ("The Grubbs," disdained by his humorless publishers), Mrs Flowers's tell-all memoir ("Living with the Devil," no offense meant, I'm sure) and daughter Amy's chamber cantata about the Flowers family curse (it's complicated...). Sharpe himself steals the show as Shun, Mr. F's live-in illustrator and body man; he does some great freestylin' à la Robin Williams in the first season, but his shtick gets old far too soon. (He's half-Japanese, btw, so only the English half's taking work away from an equally qualified Asian actor.)

The Flowers ménage takes some getting used to at first, but we found the rest of the season quite entertaining, occasionally poignant (most notably, Shun's monologue about the events that brought him to England from Japan). Season two gets off to a decent start, but we started having doubts pretty quickly; for one thing, Sharpe the comedy writer doesn't give himself and his colleagues much to work with.

I've read that "Flowers" was influenced by Japanese TV comedy, in which, from what little I've seen, improv and mimicry of out-of-control behavior are more highly prized than they are over here (by us at any rate). By S2e3 we were feeling like one of those much-missed Netflix reviewers who so often wanted the last half-hour of their lives back...
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10/10
Stunning depiction of the howling darkness.
dwillbowie26 May 2016
Warning: Spoilers
It's hard to describe what is truly sublime about this comedy drama without appearing gushy and incoherent.

Depression is a condition that is rarely talked out and often misunderstood - even by the people who suffer from it.

Flowers tackles the subject head-on and the results are a gloriously confused, achingly beautiful depiction of a torment that's all so difficult to describe.

The dark humour lays perfectly amongst the bleak photography and surreal imagery.

There have been negative critiques given of the absurdity of certain situations within the shows own universe. The reality that exists in the heads of the Flowers family and friends is heightened. No real clue is given to their location. It almost exists as a construct of the main character's mind.

Every main character gets proper development and emotional impact, especially towards the end.

From personal experience, it's impossible not to relate to this on a deeply personal level. It way stay with me for a very long time.

Will Sharpe. Thank you.
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6/10
Would have been a solid 10 but season 2 became ALL drama and NO comedy!! 2 bad!!
joiningjt20 December 2021
Warning: Spoilers
This had such promise the cast is simply phenomenal absolutely no weak actors and the writing and directing in season 1 was flawless. The magic went away in season 2 the balance of great comedy and great drama went away and it became completely all drama. Some of the episodes were hard to watch it's a shame because this show was headed for legendary status but instead will be forgotten. I have to say that it's not because of the cast they were simply brilliant it was the writing and a little of the directing they lost focus of where the show was going.
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1/10
Terrible
susansundaisy26 October 2023
I don't get the good reviews. Everyone is annoying and the Chinese character seems racist to me. I'm not sure exactly what they're trying to accomplish but I didn't crack a smile once.

I know we're all supposed to love Olivia Coleman but I feel like she's distracting a lot of the time and in this she just seemed insane. I think it's trying to be extra British by being dark but none of the characters seem to deserve any particular attention.

I really hate having to write a lot of words just a post a review to say that I didn't think it was funny at all. It was like the Jeeves books if everyone was poor and irritating.
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9/10
Gorgeous. Different. Worthwhile!
Bluechinaspecial29 July 2019
Please give this beautiful show a try. It's funny, dark, quirky and brilliant. It's primarily a portrayal of mental illness and it's forms, but is character driven. It's part high art, part horror imagery.. part comedy, part awkward Brit cringe-drama. Don't pass it up if you enjoy deep themes and excellent acting. Cinematography is top notch, also!
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10/10
A thoroughly uplifting fairy tale
andylec29 January 2017
From the first scene I was gripped and slowly drawn into the deepest recesses of the characters lives. This is drama at its best, red in tooth and claw, with humorous passages weaved throughout, temporarily lifting the tension only for a brief moment.

This is one of the best comedy/dramas ever, it deserves to become a cult classic. If you only watch one thing this year make it flowers.

Intense performances from all, but for me Sophia Di Martino was especially memorable and Shun's story especially moving.

If you like your drama stylish, taut and a bit bonkers, I recommend Flowers heartily.
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10/10
Superbly dark and bizarre.
akcomusic27 April 2016
This is peepshow meet Tamara Drew with a splash of Cohen brother and Time Burton to boot. A grand cast of bizarre characters all spiraling out of control in a grim situation comedy. Julian Barrett is on top form and the interactions are subtle and don't pander to archetypes instead allowing itself to be a little obscure. Between the suicidal children's book writer, the neurotic trombone instructor, the art hour psychopathic sister and the inventor wannabe brother; there is enough in the just the flowers family alone for a great shower never mind the auxiliary characters that also seem to have had the same level of care put into them. This screams cult classic even if the general British public don't adopt it right away, it will find a very loving home with film/TV/comedy fans everywhere much like "Nighty night" or "Monkeydust".
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9/10
Highly overlooked gem!
Pyf29 December 2016
Once in a while a rare show comes around and surprises you completely out of the blue. It's impossible to pick one genre to describe this show, it's a wonderful mix of different genres that compliment each other/

The characters in this show feel completely relatable, yet also distant at the same time. I really felt their struggles and pain throughout the series. It's a dark comedy on the surface but goes much deeper into the emotions of the characters. It really all comes together really well.

I can't wait to see what Will Sharpe works on next. The actors are brilliant in this. Julian Barratt's best role since Mighty Boosh. Olivia Colman and Will Sharpe easily steal the show in my opinion though.

Can't recommend this show enough! It's one of a kind.
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9/10
A gripping television series
SondheimTheGuineaPig11 June 2016
"Flowers" is dark, funny, poignant, and smart. A terrible beauty. I couldn't look away, and couldn't stop watching until I'd finished the entire series in a single sitting.

Will Sharpe's superb writing is brought to life by an equally superb cast of actors who give stunning performances. Barratt and Coleman in serious roles are a revelation. Sophia Di Martino and Daniel Rigby are convincingly fragile, but still relatable and even likable. Sharpe's acting is as powerful as his writing, adopting the role of Shun -- the Japanese glue barely holding this broken English family together.

"Flowers" is easily some of the best television I've seen, and I'll be following Sharpe's career with great interest.
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9/10
Moving, funny and original.
caribouster17 July 2019
Loved everything about this little gem. Wish I'd discovered it sooner and that there were more episodes. Great acting, sharp, funny with somehow surreal but also heartbreakingly real writing. Just binged both seasons and feel like putting episode one on again. I don't want to leave the Flowers's world 😂
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7/10
Disappointed
rippajackson30 August 2020
Never heard of this. After watching Season 1 I was hooked. Great comedy, Donald is absolutely hilarious. Season 2 however was monotonous. Real shame
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10/10
Brilliant and uncomfortable
nikkiworrell21 February 2019
Flowers is like a warm hug from someone who loves you, whose love you feel you don't deserve.
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6/10
Royal Tennenbaums vibe
MagicMurderFan14 October 2020
Warning: Spoilers
I like the weirdness, it actually made me cry at some points. But its hilariously weird. I'm obsessed with how cute and optimistic Shun is. Everything he says is wonderful. His story literally had me crying.
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5/10
Starts off blooming but quickly wilts
Ruskington22 September 2020
I found the early episodes of Flowers to be some of the most interesting and innovative drama and comedy I had seen in years. Olivia Colman and Julian Barratt are exceptional as you'd expect and the writing is sharp and original. Unfortunately, the story just became a complete mess as the show progressed, turning into a confused jumble of bizarre scenes and incoherent plot developments. I'm not sure what went wrong but I found it genuinely difficult to endure the second season.
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10/10
Unexpectedly Good
chopperDavo20 August 2019
I had no idea what this show would be about when I started watching. But I'm glad I watched the first 2-3 episodes because after that I was hooked.

It's super creative and gives a good account of what it's like to be depressed and to live with someone who's depressed.

Very poignant, well worth the watch.
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10/10
Astonishing: funny, dark and heart-breaking
othermotte11 February 2019
My fond memory of the first series, some time ago, didn't prepare me for the second series. At first, I was lost, until I realised the writer had left it to us, the audience, to fill in the blank spaces...like any great work does.

Depression and dysfunctionality from the first series sped full-on into mental illness in the second. Moments of joy oscillated with despair, in a way the left me open-mouthed. If the writer's intent was to take us on a journey into bi-polar and, perhaps, schizophrenia, then he succeeded big time for this viewer.

Strip out the adverts and each episode is really quite short. But it didn't feel that way. I watched the last three episodes at one sitting and was exhausted and tearful by the end.

Every now and then, something arrives that is really like nothing else. Something that I could never have imagined myself.

I rarely used the work genius but this is without a work of genius. But be warned, it will not be for everyone. It's dark and sometimes very bleak. Bu there is also hope and joy.

Astonishing. I am baffled that it isn't hailed as one of the best of the decade.
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