To get us through this summer, TV3 offers us an ambitious comedy called ‘Vintage’. I say ambitious because it is intended to be a portrait of two already very stripped-down dicks, two urban examples of the ‘boomer’ generation.
Are these Paco And Chineseperhaps at the service of scenarios inspired by those cinematic blows that existential onanism gave us Woody Allen In the 90s, but apparently they are not equal Woody Allen They don’t even come close. The lead actors are good (Abel Folk, LluÃs Villanueva, Carme Pla…) but the situations they draw are a series of clichés, in a very forced search for humor. However, there are some ups and downs that are useful for thinking. For example, their adventures Chinese (Luis Villanueva) is a psychologist who needs his patients more than they need him (because of the money he gets from them) and his wife (Carmen Pla) cheated on him with a Bulgarian he met on Tinder and left his family’s bank account in sub-zero temperatures. Of course, the psychologist Chinese At least she enters a reckless phase of survival and decides to divorce immediately. But since she cannot pay the paperwork, the lawyer and the fees, she cries out in despair: “We are too poor to get a divorce!”. And he starts looking for extra income as a collaborator on a TV show. Ahh! The coup Chinese This is amazing. He immediately understands that they want a butcher on TV, not a psychologist. The mechanics of this television ‘show’ are similar to what we would find on any network today. The person who is guaranteed to have a great interview is invited and a session awaits him. Hannibal Lecter.
Chinese The destroyer plays the role of psychoanalyst. The attendant must always pass the verdict that the guest is ‘affected by a personality disorder’. This fills the host of the ‘show’ with satisfaction. One breath goes from disorder to madness. And there is nothing better for the TV circus than to announce that the star guest has been diagnosed as mad. Ah! With this whirling motion ChineseTransforming a disgraced soldier into a puppeteer psychoanalyst, the duo created a perfect portrait of what’s happening on television today.
Source: Informacion

Barbara Dickson is a seasoned writer for “Social Bites”. She keeps readers informed on the latest news and trends, providing in-depth coverage and analysis on a variety of topics.