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It's a series of comedy that tells about George Eliot. George faces a dilemma in his personal and professional life, which he has always lived with. One day, George undergoes a new treatment to become a better person, but finds that he has been replaced by a completely different new George. In the end, George revealed that his worst enemy was already the same.
[It] needs to slow down and stretch for a bit, luxuriating in the ease of the idea. Instead it races into scenarios that feel forced. There's still a lot to like about the series and maybe it will work better as it gets comfortable in its own skin.
Part of me hoped for Living With Yourself to go darker that it did and another part wanted it to be funnier, but like the clone characters themselves, the finished product gives us a bit of everything and it works.
Series creator Timothy Greenberg keeps things amusing as he deftly rotates perspectives, illuminating different facets of hope and disappointment. Worth checking out.
Not for nothing does "Living With Yourself" feel, at its best moments, like a sitcom, with all the energy and wild invention that comes with the genre.
Rudd is really good at being silly and goofy, but he resists the temptation to steer into that for Living With Yourself, which is much more dry and deadpan.
[Living with Yourself] takes a few episodes to warm up, and improves by the end of the series. But it never recovers enough to live up to the promise of its premise.
One Paul Rudd is great, but twice Paul Rudd is even better. Ambitious, clever, dark & charming, Living With Yourself is one of the best shows of 2019. [Full review in Spanish]
Paul Rudd and Aisling Bea are an absolute delight together, 'Living with Yourself' is charming, funny and utterly bonkers enough at times to make it worth your time.