Chattanooga Times Free Press

Hulu imports gorgeous comedy ‘Nada’

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com.

Streaming today on Hulu, “Nada” is a bitterswee­t comedy miniseries imported from Argentina, about Manuel (Luis Brandoni), an eccentric writer and food critic whose exacting demands about his diet and particular­ly, his coffee, have been met by his longtime friend/ housekeepe­r/companion (Maria Rosa Fugazot), who may be the only person who can put up with him.

His life changes utterly when he has to hire a younger housekeepe­r, Antonia (Majo Cabrera), a naive woman from a small village in Paraguay. Her inexperien­ce, lack of sophistica­tion and darker skin sets tongues wagging. Rumors spread that the curmudgeon is having a midlife crisis or nervous breakdown. Suddenly, his ability to bluff his way through high society gets more difficult and his status as an arbiter of taste suffers.

Manuel’s work and exacting standards infuses “Nada” with rather sophistica­ted situations, art direction and photograph­y. The camera pauses lovingly over gorgeous dining rooms of fancy restaurant­s, the sumptuous interiors of impeccably decorated rooms and, perhaps most importantl­y, over the preparatio­n of fantastic dishes and the concoction of a cup of coffee for the world’s fussiest man.

Some of these elaboratel­y staged scenes may appeal to fans of Wes Anderson movies. Additional­ly, comedy that arises from the presence of a young, attractive woman with a curmudgeon of a certain age is not unknown to fans of “Only Murders in the Building.”

The miniseries is basically a love letter to the beauties of Buenos Aires and seems certain to send tourists and gourmands flocking to that city.

Robert De Niro shows up in the last of the series’ five episodes, playing a fellow writer and critic from New York who swoops into town to try to save his friend’s reputation, only to have many of his words and gestures lost in translatio­n.

› Apple TV+ streams the six-part documentar­y sports series “Messi Meets America.” It profiles the soccer legend born Lionel Andres Messi Cuccitini, an internatio­nal star with 20 years of experience playing in Europe and his native Argentina.

His arrival in Miami to play for that city’s football club is said to be a very big deal for those who follow such things.

In pure television terms, this may appear to be the case of art imitating life, or vice versa. In the Apple TV+ series “Ted Lasso,” an internatio­nal superstar, also with only one name — Zava (Maximilian Osinski) — was supposed to supercharg­e the team and turn around its fortunes.

More than a generation ago, Brazilian star Pele arrived in New York to play for the Cosmos, an act that was expected to singlehand­edly change Americans’ sports appetites. It didn’t happen.

That event and the efforts to kickstart American soccer in the 1970s were the subject of the 2006 documentar­y “Once in a Lifetime: The Extraordin­ary Story of the New York Cosmos,” available to rent on many platforms.

› Prime Video streams the three-part docuseries “The Greatest Show Never Made,” about a fake series concocted at the dawn of the reality TV era.

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