Arrested Development

(serie)
Tráiler
Estados Unidos, (2003–2019), 33 h 40 min (Minutos: 22–37 min)

Cineastas:

Mitchell Hurwitz

Música:

David Schwartz

Reparto:

Jason Bateman, Portia de Rossi, Will Arnett, Michael Cera, Alia Shawkat, David Cross, Jeffrey Tambor, Jessica Walter, Armie Hammer, Ron Howard, Judy Greer (más)
(más profesiones)

Streaming (2)

Temporada(5) / Episodios(84)

Sinopsis(1)

The Bluth clan lives a life of excess, funded by the family credit card and paid for by the fortune patriarch George Bluth (Jeffrey Tambor) made in the tract home development business. Oldest son George Oscar Bluth II, nicknamed Gob, is an "illusionist" of minor importance who has anger management issues, while the youngest son Buster whiles away his days taking obscure graduate school courses. Daughter Lindsay (Portia de Rossi) is a vain socialite who throws parties with her sexually ambiguous husband (David Cross). The only sane member of the family is Lindsay's twin brother Michael (Jason Bateman), a widower who stands to inherit the reins to the family corporation when his father retires. However, at the retirement party some unexpected obstacles are thrown into the mix: Michael, having informed the family that his first task as head of the company will be to confiscate everyone's credit cards, is passed over in favor of his snobby alcoholic mother, Lucille (Jessica Walter). Just when Michael decides to wash his hands of the family and move to Arizona with his 13-year-old son George Michael, George is arrested on fraud charges and the family's assets are frozen. Michael is forced to step up and aid his family in adjusting to their new lives. (texto oficial de la distribuidora)

(más)

Videos (18)

Tráiler

Reseñas (1)

novoten 

todas reseñas del usuario

inglés Seasons 1-3 – 85% – Almost over the line, potentially incomprehensible under greater viewer scrutiny, and increasingly original thanks to escalating plots and creative courage. Some, like myself, will fall in love with the pseudo-clever illusionist Gob, some with Lucille, the stiff neck of the family, and some perhaps with the perpetually uncertain George Michael. Nevertheless, it is a joy to watch a family where even the most ordinary member is extraordinary. Some of the scripted repartee of the Bluths are true diamonds (ongoing jokes, led by the chicken dance), and the only thing that spoils my pleasure are the entanglements with the imprisonment of George Sr. or Oscar and the related resolution of various family scams. However, these three unnecessarily short seasons are a true treasure for anyone looking for something previously unbeknownst to sitcoms. Season 4 – 70% – A long-awaited return that is definitely not for everyone. The concept of intertwining is pushed to the limit of viewer tolerance, some main characters seem more like secondary ones (which hurts my favorite Lindsay the most in later episodes), and Mitchell Hurwitz is setting up several tie-ins for future endeavors. The new season, therefore, lacks the coherence of the older episodes, but that doesn't mean there is no fun to be had with the Bluth family. It's just different and very, very specific – with the phenomenal Isla Fisher as a new, almost inseparable character. Season 5 – 60% – A swan song, where the funniest part was the anticipation and constant assurance that it would start filming soon. The same assurance that ultimately lasted several years. The way it was served in two parts turned out to be a somewhat cruel decision, but that's the least of its problems. The attempt to continuing the original poetics is full of cramps, largely owing to numerous problems behind the scenes in recent years, and cannot be completely filtered out even with the greatest effort (Jeffrey Tambor's behavior towards Jessica Walter, the racist David Cross, Will Arnett visibly more destroyed by alcohol). The long-term storylines are either too stretched (Fakeblock, the wall, Lucille Austero) or desperately boring, and I feel like fast-forwarding through them (unfortunately, mostly anything with Tobias). Fortunately, even this sad ordeal cannot kill the potential of good running jokes ("The Final Countdown" is perfect, even if it's used a hundred times) or the chemistry of the main ensemble. That's why I'm even more disappointed by the forced flashbacks or the absence of Lindsay and the glaring green screen. Arrested Development is saying goodbye in its definitely weakest period, but it cannot destroy the memories of the original concept – and it also makes the viewer mournfully reflect on how far the series could have grown if it had been given the chance it deserved at the beginning. ()

Galería (204)