Current:Home > Invest'Apples Never Fall': Latest adaptation of Liane Moriarty book can't match 'Big Little Lies' -VitalEdge Finance Pro
'Apples Never Fall': Latest adaptation of Liane Moriarty book can't match 'Big Little Lies'
View
Date:2025-04-11 20:53:05
All Liane Moriarty book adaptations look alike.
You have the famous cast, the mysterious setting, the time jumps, the infighting and, of course, the big (little) twists. But even with all the right ingredients, the finished dish might end up like Hulu's undercooked 2021 series "Nine Perfect Strangers" instead of HBO's delectable 2017 hit "Big Little Lies."
Is the third time the charm for Moriarty adaptations? Well, not really. This time it's Peacock bringing one of the Australian author's books to life: 2021's "Apples Never Fall." In story and tone, the series (all episodes now streaming, ★★ out of four) hews closer to "Lies" than "Strangers." And it almost gives you those butterflies of excitement again, at first.
"Apples" is an intimate tale of one family, the Delaneys, a Palm Beach, Florida, tennis dynasty rocked when their matriarch Joy (Annette Bening) disappears. Is her husband Stan (Sam Neil) to blame? Was it the couple's recent oddly mysterious houseguest Savannah (Georgia Flood)? What do the four adult Delaney children (Alison Brie, Jake Lacy, Conor Merrigan-Turner and Essie Randles) even know about their parents?
It's an enticing mystery made all the more compelling by the performances of the talented cast, particularly stalwarts Bening and Neill. But while the series starts strong and captures your interest for five of its seven episodes, by the finale all the exhilaration of domestic mystery collapses. It's more disappointing than angering – the miniseries had the potential to take your breath away. Instead, you may wander away before you finish.
Stan and Joy Delaney have it all, or so it seems. Retired tennis coaches, they have a beautiful house, rich friends and four grown children who appear to dote on their parents. There's Amy (Brie), a flaky free spirit; Troy (Lacy), a high-powered finance bro with a superiority complex; Logan (Merrigan-Turner), a commitment-phobic marina worker; and stubborn Brooke (Randles), a struggling physical therapist amid a very long engagement. But it's not all fun and tennis matches in the backyard court as they become the subject of a police investigation into Joy's disappearance. Dark family secrets and dynamics unfurl as the four children start to wonder if their genial father might have the capacity to commit murder.
And then there's Savannah, a self-described victim of domestic abuse who shows up one night on the Delaneys' doorstep and somehow is invited to linger for weeks. Surely she has to be involved somehow?
The best parts of "Apples" are about family dynamics. Moriarty excels at revealing the seediest parts of life, so hidden under supposed normality you can see yourself and your family in all that darkness. Series creator Melanie Marnich ("The Affair") captures this with the help of the actors, each hiding something behind their blinding Crest Whitestrips smiles. Lacy, no stranger to playing rich jerks, manages to find the vulnerability in Troy's uber-dude facade. Brie, accustomed to playing buttoned-up Type-A characters, has a lot of fun with Amy's hippie-dippie aesthetic. Neill balances the fine line between gruff and cruel, a symbol of a thousand baby boomer stereotypes without seeming derivative.
But the star is Bening, who has the overworked, overwrought and underappreciated Joy down pat from her first appearance. Her complaints about marriage and motherhood are universal but no less urgent or valid for their ubiquity. That her children only start to appreciate her when she's gone is no coincidence.
'Apples Never Fall' preview:Liane Moriarty's latest fractured family hits Peacock
There's a lot of talent in one (fictional) family, but the material doesn't always match the performances. The book builds to a booming crescendo and then crashes into a quiet, unexpected but anticlimactic conclusion. It's unsurprising that the writers opted to adjust the ending for the screen, but unfortunately, they don't do enough to make it feel vital. "Apples" still wraps up with a lame whimper, even after the writers try to inject more suspense into its final scenes. Momentum is hard to sustain, and endings are hard to nail.
With a more perfect cherry (or apple) on top of the sundae, "Apples" might have gotten closer to the greatness of "Lies."
But alas, it might end up another forgettable footnote in the streaming ecosystem, as ephemeral as the apple you forgot you had for breakfast yesterday.
veryGood! (63396)
Related
- 'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
- Tiffany Haddish Arrested for Suspicion of Driving Under the Influence
- South Korea, Japan and China agree to resume trilateral leaders’ summit, but without specific date
- Beyoncé's 'Renaissance' film premieres: Top moments from the chrome carpet
- Paris Olympics live updates: Quincy Hall wins 400m thriller; USA women's hoops in action
- Irish writer Paul Lynch wins Booker Prize with dystopian novel ‘Prophet Song’
- Violence erupts in Dublin in response to knife attack that wounded 3 children
- Man killed after shooting at police. A woman was heard screaming in Maryland home moments before
- Tropical rains flood homes in an inland Georgia neighborhood for the second time since 2016
- Skyscraper-studded Dubai has flourished during regional crises. Could it benefit from hosting COP28?
Ranking
- Residents in Alaska capital clean up swamped homes after an ice dam burst and unleashed a flood
- Teenage murder suspect escapes jail for the second time in November
- Bryan Adams says Taylor Swift inspired him to rerecord: 'You realize you’re worth more'
- Israel-Hamas war rages with cease-fire delayed, Israeli hostage and Palestinian prisoner families left to hope
- Sonya Massey's family keeps eyes on 'full justice' one month after shooting
- These Secrets About the Twilight Franchise Will Be Your Life Now
- Iowa State relies on big plays, fourth-down stop for snowy 42-35 win over No. 19 K-State
- ‘Hunger Games’ feasts, ‘Napoleon’ conquers but ‘Wish’ doesn’t come true at Thanksgiving box office
Recommendation
Messi injury update: Ankle 'better every day' but Inter Miami star yet to play Leagues Cup
Heavy snowfall in Romania and Moldova leaves 1 person dead and many without electricity
Geert Wilders, a far-right anti-Islam populist, wins big in Netherlands elections
Travel Tuesday emerges as a prime day for holiday and winter travel deals
Spooky or not? Some Choa Chu Kang residents say community garden resembles cemetery
Colorado suspect arrested after 5 puppies, 2 kittens found dead in car trunk.
Man killed after shooting at police. A woman was heard screaming in Maryland home moments before
Biden says 4-year-old Abigail Edan was released by Hamas. He hopes more U.S. hostages will be freed