India Today

THE YOUNG AND THE RESTLESS

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Netflix finally has shows about the lives of teenagers that aren’t mentally unsettling (13 Reasons Why) or cringe-worthy (Riverdale).

The site’s two new releases, Derry Girls and Sex Education, have much in common. The scripts are witty, the young cast is terrific, and both shows tackle the lives of teenagers with nuance, without resorting to preachy drama.

Derry Girls follows the lives of five teenagers—four cheeky girls and one shy boy—growing up in 1990s Northern Ireland during the guerrilla war between Irish nationalis­ts and British loyalists. The focus though is always on the group and how they get into mischief at their Catholic high school. The best part: it’s the women (girls, really) getting into trouble, shooting their mouths off, and generally creating havoc.

The gang is led by Erin Quinn (Saoirse-Monica Jackson, with delightful facial expression­s) who wants to fight every injustice; her cousin Orla (Louisa Harland) is the Phoebe of the group—dopey and just a bit dumb; there’s Clare (Nicola Coughlan), the sweet-faced, panic-stricken and hyper child, who fasts for Ethiopia and acts as the group’s moral compass; Jamie Lee O’Donnell as the foulmouthe­d Michelle is the bad/ cool girl with swagger to spare and the one who also creates the most chaos; and, finally, the ‘wee English fella’ James (Dylan Llewellyn), sent to the all girls’ school because they’re afraid he would get beaten up (for being English) at a boys’ school. Together, they get into many misadventu­res.

Sex Education has teenagers getting into adventures of another kind—sexual. Set in a small town in the UK, the show follows the life of high-school student Otis (Asa Butterfiel­d, charming, nervous and believable), the son of sex therapist Jean Milburn (Gillian Anderson, channellin­g Meryl Streep for the role).

Aided by the wily and complicate­d Maeve (portrayed outstandin­gly by Emma Mackey), Otis

starts dishing out sex and relationsh­ip advice to his clueless classmates; an unusual move for a virgin who fakes masturbati­on.

In Derry Girls, the five teenagers are entertaini­ng, spouting gags in every line and being rebellious by accident. Each one brings some comic genius to their escapades—ranging from destroying a fish and chips shop, to witnessing the ‘miracle’ of the Madonna crying in a church.

Sex Education’s characters seem more familiar because the show falls for some usual tropes—a gay best friend; the school stud who turns out to be a troubled character living in fear of his father, the school principal; and the popular jock falling for the school rebel, who is secretly very talented. Luckily, we get to peel off the layers behind each character, exploring their stories and learning that looks can be deceiving.

The strong characters and a great cast in both shows make for an entertaini­ng watch. Season 2 (for both) cannot come soon enough. — Joanna Lobo

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SEX Netflix’s and EDUCATION GIRLS DERRY the lives deal with with teenagers of nuance

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