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One Day Review

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One Day Review: 21 Years of Banter, Angst, and Bittersweet Love

From Edinburgh Affair to Soulmate: Why Ambika Mod and Leo Woodall's Electric Chemistry Anchors This Intergenerational Epic

Arash Nahandian by Arash Nahandian
1 year ago
in Entertainment, Reviews, TV Shows
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You know the story. Boy meets girl, boy and girl become best friends but never lovers, time passes in a montage of missed connections and heartbreaks…cue the bittersweet ending. It’s a tale as old as time, but One Day breathes new life into the concept.

Adapted from David Nicholls’ bestselling novel, this 14-episode Netflix series follows working-class Emma and posh Dexter across 20 years of friendship teetering on the edge of romance. We drop in on the pair every July 15th to see where life has taken them since their graduation night meet-cute back in ’88. She’s a wry intellectual chasing her writerly dreams. He’s a privileged charmer floating from one opportunity to the next. Though their paths constantly diverge, fate (or is it true love?) always seems to bring them back into each other’s orbits.

Will this be the year Emma and Dexter finally get it right? It’s hard not to root for these two down-to-earth dreamers as they fumble their way toward meaning and happiness. Anchored by the off-the-charts chemistry between breakout stars Ambika Mod and Leo Woodall, One Day captures both the soaring highs and earth-shattering lows of young adulthood. Part nostalgia-drenched romance, part bittersweet coming-of-age tale, this series will speak to anyone who’s ever wondered “what if?” about a friend who could have been something more. Clear your calendar before pressing play, because Emma and Dexter’s star-crossed story is pretty impossible to turn off once it gets its hooks in you.

A Story That Sticks With You

One Day makes it impossible not to fall for Emma and Dexter. Following these two affable dreamers over 20 years, you’ll laugh with them, cry with them, and desperately hope they can overcome bad timing to find their way together. Though based on a novel rather than real life, the series rings remarkably true thanks to lived-in dialogue and naturalistic performances from charming leads Ambika Mod and Leo Woodall. Their quippy banter and simmering chemistry, balanced by moments of raw vulnerability, will give even cynical viewers tummy flutters.

Beyond its central will-they-won’t-they, One Day offers endless nostalgia for anyone who came of age around the late 80s/early 90s. From Emma’s politically-minded mixtapes to Dexter’s foray into cheeky TV presenting, the period details, music choices, and pop culture references are sharply observed without feeling cloying. Each 30-minute episode flies by in what feels like 30 seconds, making this series as easy to binge as a bag of salt and vinegar crisps.

Fair warning, however: keep tissues at the ready for One Day’s final chapter. Without spoiling anything, let’s just say Emma and Dexter’s ending stays faithful to the beloved novel that started it all. You’ll likely find yourself wishing for a Hollywood rewrite, but the bittersweet conclusion shouldn’t stop you from falling head over heels for everything that comes before it. This funny, tender coming-of-age romance will linger in your heart long after the credits roll.

Why We Fell Hard for Emma and Dexter

It’s rare for a TV couple to light up the screen with as much charisma and complexity as Ambika Mod and Leo Woodall bring to Emma and Dexter. Though on paper they’re opposites – her, a working-class dreamer; him, a privileged underachiever – the actors share crackling chemistry that makes this odd couple not just plausible but inevitable. Both leads balance wry humor with emotional rawness, lending equal heart and heat to Emma and Dexter’s on-again off-again connection. Will they choose each other, or self-sabotage yet again? Your guess is as good as theirs in this angsty, authentic character study.

One Day Review
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Beyond the A+ casting, One Day distinguishes itself through strong writing and directing that cleverly unfolds the saga across 14 discrete episodes. Checking in once a year on the titular “one day” – July 15th, St. Swithin’s Day – each chapter offers an intimate snapshot of Emma and Dexter’s inner lives. We witness their hopes take flight, dreams derail, hearts open and close.

At times the rigid structure strains credulity, but mostly it casts an aching nostalgia over daily life’s quiet turning points – a late-night chat, an impulsive kiss, a single slow dance. Unique period details in everything from music choices to that brick-sized mobile phone will catapult Gen X-ers back to their youth. Millennials may feel they’ve time-traveled to a quainter pre-internet era that’s somehow relatable despite the lack of DMs.

However you came of age, Emma and Dexter’s imperfect journey toward self-understanding will strike a chord. By tracing one friendship over 20 years, One Day reminds us that though time passes in fits and starts, the human connections that sustain us remain our true constants.

Where This Addictive Series Stumbles

It feels nitpicky to criticize such an otherwise swoon-worthy series, but alas, nothing’s perfect – not even Emma and Dexter’s love story. Clocking in at over 7 hours of runtime, some viewers may find One Day overstays its welcome, particularly in meandering middle chapters. The addictive quality that makes this binge so delicious also leaves certain episodes feeling languid rather than eventful.

One Day Review

There’s also a frustrating imbalance in perspective that favors Dexter’s interiority while leaving Emma’s dreams and decisions largely opaque. We gain rich insight into his foibles but spend less time understanding her worldview beyond surface-level quirks like mixtapes and literature. I kept wishing we could trade a few of Dexter’s repetitive bad boy antics to glimpse more of Emma’s inner longings and complexities.

Finally, that ending. *Sigh*…look, no spoilers, but fans of Nicholas Sparks-esque melodrama should consider yourselves warned. The final episode hews very closely to the much-debated conclusion from David Nicholls’ novel, which may gratify book loyalists but will likely leave many viewers lamenting lost possibilities. Diehard romantics, proceed with caution.

At the end of the day, though, these drawbacks shouldn’t negate the abundant charms of Emma and Dexter’s bittersweet coming-of-age. If you’re pining for a nostalgic tearjerker to sweep you off your feet, One Day overwhelmingly delivers. Just don’t be surprised if you’re left wanting more – of Emma’s hidden depths, of Dexter’s personal growth, and of a ending where soulmates finally get their happy ever after.

Why We Can’t Quit Emma and Dexter

Ah, Emma and Dexter. These star-crossed soulmates wormed their way into our hearts and would not let go. Portrayed to perfection by breakout stars Ambika Mod and Leo Woodall, both characters subvert rom-com stereotypes even as they fulfill our desire to see two lovable hot messes somehow end up together.

One Day Review

As our resident working-class heroine, Emma combines razor-sharp wit with passionate idealism. An aspiring author from humble beginnings, she fends off self-doubt with sarcasm as she tries to navigate work and relationships. Mod brings Emma to vivid life in all her complexities – fiercely independent yet secretly insecure, cynical yet romantic, ambitious yet riddled with anxiety. We ache as she aches over her writing career and Mr. Wrongs, privately willing her to see her own worth.

In contrast, Dexter coasts on privileged charm despite lacking any real drive. Woodall gives depth and vulnerability to this licentious underachiever, though Dexter makes his share of infuriating choices over 20 years of arrested development. The actor’s charisma and chemistry with Mod make Dexter’s flaws forgivable rather than insufferable. We may shake our heads at his careless treatment of Emma, but hope lingers that he’ll evolve into the devoted partner she deserves.

Will they or won’t they finally get together? The genius of One Day is keeping us perpetually uncertain. Emma and Dexter’s friendship weathers blowups and reunions, laughter and tears, validation and neglect. They evolve from recent grads fumbling toward adulthood into seasoned professionals still struggling to embrace commitment. Regardless of their relationship status, a bone-deep understanding flows between them. Emma grounds Dexter’s flightiness; he inspires her creativity. They have an unspoken shorthand that neither shares with subsequent partners. We viewers live vicariously through their emotional intimacy, wishing we all had that one friend who has seen us through life’s richness and rawness.

When all is said and done, many one-season TV romances fail to convince us love will endure once the cameras stop rolling. Defying the odds, Emma and Dexter’s messy, protracted journey convinces us their connection – whether platonic or destined for something more – will outlast their youth. And that’s the most romantic notion of all.

The Finishing Touches That Transport You Back in Time

Beyond captivating performances from Mod and Woodall, One Day thrives thanks to strong directing and a top-notch supporting cast. Dexter’s breezy mother Alison practically leaps off the page thanks to Essie Davis’ witty and poignant performance. We ache along with Dexter as Alison’s terminal cancer diagnosis shakes his carefree world. Her presence reminds us how loss shapes love stories as much as passion.

One Day Review

Jonny Weldon also stands out as Emma’sneurotic flatmate Ian, injecting plenty of cringe comedy as he pines hopelessly for her. The actors create such textured dynamics that I wished for a few more scenes between Emma’s friends, who ground her world beyond Dexter’s orbit.

From soundtrack to set design, the period details in One Day are fabulously transportive without hitting us over the head with nostalgia. Subtle touches like a Pride and Prejudice TV tie-in book on Emma’s nightstand, or hearing Crowded House’s “Don’t Dream It’s Over” at a wedding reception, organically immerse us in bygone eras. Scenes often feel lit in a honeyed glow, beautifully evoking those timeless summers and dusk-lit conversations that linger in memory as we age.

One Day effectively bottles the lightning charm of young adulthood, when friendships run bone-deep and opportunities still feel infinite. Sinking into Emma and Dexter’s world for a few hours leaves your heart brimming with nostalgia for old friends, old flames, and the one who got away.

Closing Thoughts: This Couple Will Steal Your Heart

Spanning two decades in 14 bittersweet episodes, One Day takes its place among the pantheon of great unconventional TV love stories. Following Emma and Dexter’s friendship through life’s ups and downs, we watch them evolve from naïve grads fumbling toward self-understanding into seasoned adults who can finally recognize true partnership. That they round this bend just in time to face life’s hardest losses makes their connection all the more poignant.

One Day Review

Driven by note-perfect performances from Mod and Woodall, who share off-the-charts chemistry whether sparring or consoling, One Day makes us believers in second chances and soulmates against all odds. If only the ending stayed as true to Emma and Dexter as they ultimately prove to each other. Their story concludes on a bittersweet note that I won’t spoil here, except to warn nostalgic romantics to brace for some frustration.

Flaws aside, I strongly recommend adding One Day to your Netflix queue if you enjoy character-driven indie romance rather than bombastic Nicholas Sparks fare. Allow yourself to get swept away by the nostalgia and keep tissues handy for the finale. You may end up wishing Emma and Dexter’s story turned out differently, but that won’t stop you cherishing the hard-won happiness they found together along the way. These beautifully flawed friends turned lovers will capture both your heart and memory across 14 hours you won’t want to forget.

The Review

One Day

8 Score

One Day will sweep you off your feet and break your heart. Carried by magnetic lead chemistry between Mod and Woodall, this nostalgic coming-of-age romance authentically captures young adulthood's soaring highs and gutting lows. Uneven pacing and an infuriating ending scarcely detract from the abundant charms of Emma and Dexter's angsty tale spanning 20 years of friendship teetering on the edge of love. If you enjoy ugly-crying at unconventional TV love stories, add this to your queue immediately.

PROS

  • Captivating lead performances and chemistry
  • Nostalgic period details and soundtrack
  • Unique structure spanning 20 years
  • Charms despite flaws

CONS

  • Frustrating pacing feels drawn out
  • Uneven focus on protagonists' perspectives
  • Faithful but disappointing ending

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 0
Tags: Amber GrappyAmbika ModBrendan QuinnDramaComedyEleanor TomlinsonFeaturedLeo WoodallNicole TaylorOne DayRomance
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