Summary20-something Bridgette (Frankie Shaw) tries to balance relationships, work, sex, and life as single mother in this comedy adapted from Shaw's 2015 Sundance Film Festival Jury award-winning short film of the same name.
Summary20-something Bridgette (Frankie Shaw) tries to balance relationships, work, sex, and life as single mother in this comedy adapted from Shaw's 2015 Sundance Film Festival Jury award-winning short film of the same name.
This show is so fresh, so original and through the laughs tugs at the heartstrings. It's probably one of the most original 30 minute comedies you've every seen, with the situations at one point subtle and nuanced, and at the next turn broad and really funny. Frankie Shaw who originated the show and also stars is (as one might expect) just right in the role she created for herself. The most charming character in the show is Frankie's "son" Larry, who is played by darling twin girls. They are unbelievably cute and perfect. (Because of production rules limiting work times, kid roles are often played by twins.) This is one of our favorite shows.
An engaging, funny, sometimes painful show. Frankie Shaw is a delight, and Rosie can really, really pull her weight. Her acting chops are spot on. The script is fresh, and the direction is crisp. Looking forward to the second season.
The show improved with each one. The premiere is tonally all over the place--it’s hard to know which of Bridgette’s mistakes are meant to be funny, and which speak of tragedy. ... But then, in episode three, Shaw seems to find her footing, and I found myself thinking that SMILF could develop a “Shameless”-like charm.
"SMILF" certainly has no shortage of ideas. ... What the show doesn’t consistently have in its first three episodes, however, is a sense of how to hone those stories, and make them both structurally sound and specific.
Being gross, graphic and disagreeable has not kept Shameless from having a long run on Showtime. SMILF is in that vein, and perhaps also will find enough of an audience to sustain it. It’s hard to know what going to work anymore. But this one just doesn’t work for me.
I hated this show so much I could barely watch 15 minutes of the first episode. I raised 2 children as a single mother, with no child support and a very modest salary, and this bears almost no resemblance to my life. From getting up at 5 to make lunches and breakfasts, get everyone dressed and out the door on time so as to arrive at work by 8 am, and then doing the reverse at the end of the day, every bit of energy I had went to my kids and my job. Yes, I missed having a relationship and doing fun things, but I can honestly say I never even had the energy for a sex fantasy. That early scene gives such a completely misleading picture of a single mother's life, which is all about taking care of (and loving) the kids, the job, the finances, the ancient car, the old house, the laundry, etc., while trying to keep a few precious friendships alive. I would love to see a show that REALLY portrays the life of a single parent, but it would probably be too boring to develop an audience..
This show isn't just bad, it's dysfunctional. Edgy? No, just a spherical object banging itself against a wall, whilst trying to normalize everything that's bad in society today. It did one thing right, it ticked ALL the progressive boxes in the first episode.
I'm not going to waste my time with a comprehensive review of this show, because all that can be said is that... "it's trash". Who is this show for? I grew up in a single parent household, and nothing about this show resonates with me. The characters are vacuous, the plot is non-existent, and it's just unbelievably dumb.