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In this dramatic series, everything follows the divine plan that governs everything but Aziraphale and Crowley. Both parties are the power of evil and good, since both have lived among the mortals of the earth since their beginning. Both grew fond of the way of life, where they did not really look forward to the exciting war between humans.
The show is at its best when David Tennant and Michael Sheen are together, coming up with hare-brained schemes to (if not cancel but at least) postpone the end of times.
There's a lot to take in while watching Good Omens, but Neil Gaiman and director Douglas MacKinnon have done a fine job of making a show that's fun to watch.
Watch it for [Michael] Sheen's prissy bon viveur and [David] Tennant's snake-eyed and snake-hipped devil, who "sauntered vaguely downwards" rather than fell.
The script is, unsurprisingly, annunciation-grade, luminously funny and strikingly poignant-and considering the principal characters include angels, demons and witches, (and a tween Antichrist) it's as human as they come.
Together, it's like watching two musicians at the top of their game play a duet; they positively sing... The rest of it's not bad -- not world-ending, but not exactly heavenly, either.
A cursory overview of the plot would suggest that the two decide to work together to defend humanity from divine caprice - but the performances make it clear that what each entity is truly fighting for is one another, and the bond they've forged.