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The comedy series tells the story of three women who live in three different generations and face treason differently. There is a housewife in the 1960s, a socialite in the 1980s and a lawyer in 2018 who deal with their lives exceptionally. Each of these women treats infidelity differently through the ages. Over time, the series examines how women's roles in that cause have changed but their reaction to treason has not changed over the ages.
With such enjoyably brilliant performances from Lucy Liu and the rest of the cast, the juicy storytelling becomes that much more engrossing, and the ten-episode season will certainly under-stay its welcome, if anything.
Despite its partial period setting, "Women" is essentially a modern version of "Housewives," mixing dark comedy with violence to illuminate the lives of its main characters.
The tongue-in-cheek tone can be tricky. But beginning with the opening credits, which is set against the Frank Sinatra classic L.O.V.E. and pulpy comic book scenes, Why Women Kill gets the tone just right.
Mark Cherry assembles a truly magnificent cast for what is billed as a darkly comedic drama, but it's very difficult to connect with the characters, and that's troublesome.