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From HBO, this satire sentimental series follows two ex-lovers who chose to vanish together from life. They have plans to go on an energizing experience where nobody can find them. Ruby and Billy battle the pressure that despite everything exists between them while they are talking together.
A wild and gloriously unpredictable ride awaits anyone who hops aboard the crazy train of Run, an exhilarating exercise in dark and bracingly original romantic comedy.
It suffers from a tonal and narrative identity crisis that only gets more frustrating as the season progresses. Ruby and Billy are complex characters stuck in a show that doesn't seem to know what to do with them.
Building their romantic foundation is key to keeping this momentum-at-all-costs train on the tracks, and even though that should've happened right away, there's still time to get it right.
It's unfortunate that the fast-paced urgency that pulls you in at the beginning of the series is also what causes it to slightly unravel. But despite this, Run is an undeniably entertaining series.
The best of Run has that razor-sharp wit that made Waller-Bridge famous, but it's really the work by Wever and Gleeson that elevates it into a must-watch.