Lovesick
Lovesick
TV-MA | 02 October 2014 (USA)

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SEASON & EPISODES
  • 3
  • 2
  • 1
  • Reviews
    Supelice Dreadfully Boring
    Dynamixor The performances transcend the film's tropes, grounding it in characters that feel more complete than this subgenre often produces.
    Sameer Callahan It really made me laugh, but for some moments I was tearing up because I could relate so much.
    Mandeep Tyson The acting in this movie is really good.
    arevelyne I really love this series and here's why. First, the actors are top notch. They are excellently type cast, and each character is developed in such a way that I feel like I really know them. The connection between Dylan and Evie is charming and it keep me coming back for more. Luke is hilarious and Angus is the friend we all have had. Even the flashbacks work because it is clear that everything this gang of friends has experienced has helped make them who they are today. More shows like this Netflix, please! I really can't wait for the next season to come out!
    bettycjung 1/13/18. I'm glad NF developed this as an original series. I watched all three seasons and wish there was more! The premise was so basic, Dylan has to inform his previous lovers that he has an STD. Because of great writing, Dylan's adventures turn into a closer look at his relationships and those of his flatmates, Luke, Evie and their friend, Angus. And, the relationships are realistic, messy, and complicated. But, throughout it all you want them all to find happiness. Worth catching for its optimism that everyone will find their way in love eventually.
    Charles Herold (cherold) This brilliantly funny series is about Dylan, a young man whose chlamydia results in his needing to contact his ex-lovers to warn them. Each episode involves a call then a flashback as we see a time in which Dylan either bedded or broke up with his girl-of-the-week.The series is very funny, with sharp writing and sometimes intricate plotting, All the episodes fit together like a jigsaw puzzle, so as the series progresses we fill in more pieces and get a greater understanding of the principals.I really loved the first season, but I was just slightly less enamored with the second. A constant thread of the series is the unspoken love between Dylan and Evie. At first this is just fun will-they-or-won't-they stuff, but by season two that series of missed connections, bad timing, and poor communication are darkening the lives of them and anyone they become involved with, so increasingly the story is feeling like a dire warning about the destructiveness of frustrated love. And that's kind of depressing.Unfortunately the first two episodes of season 3 weren't funny, leaving a soap opera built around the discomfort of two people continually out of phase. That's when I gave up on the whole thing, not even caring anymore if those two ever got together.Rating is for first two seasons. I'm just going to pretend the third never happened.
    chaits-bhat Being drunk and having read some words about being banned from writing future reviews in case I give away any spoilers, makes me fairly petrified. But here goes it...this is the right kind of mush. The story, the characters are so well written, that you crave for more (nice word crave), you want to hear more, see more from each of the characters- Evie in Season 1 and surprisingly Angus in Season 2. Every episode is a little sloppy mushy romantic little present waiting to be opened. You can't help but root for Dillon in every episode (I think I am going to check "Contains Spoilers" at this point). If this the kind of Romcoms I can look forward to without the age old sexism and sappy formulas(Is it formulae?) , I am all in. The backdrop of Glasgow is beautiful. The only one reason why I held myself from giving this a 10 is because, the complex characters have been portrayed really young and my mind of 33 years (ok 34) cannot comprehend me having such emotions at such a young age.