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Short summary

The mating ritual can get messy. Let's see if we have this straight... Steve's with Jane but he's suddenly hot for Susan who met Steve through Jeff whom Susan used to go out with though she's just dumped Patrick despite the great sex so Patrick's asked Sally out which bugs Susan since Sally is her best friend... Based on the outrageous British hit series of the same name, Coupling concerns love and lust among six thirty- somethings who are either involved, formerly involved or looking to become intimately involved -- often with each other. The result, not surprisingly, is a very involving comedy filled with eye-popping situations and equally jaw-dropping one-liners. The comic possibilities for pairings appear as limitless as the characters' desires for Coupling. Wild comedy... Insatiable laughs.

The show was canceled after four episodes.

This is the US remake of the UK sitcom Coupling (2000).

The original pilot starred Melissa George as Susan, Breckin Meyer as Jeff, and Emily Rutherfurd as Sally. It was produced by Deborah Kaplan and Harry Elfont.

Lindsay Price sang the theme song, "Perhaps, Perhaps, Perhaps".

User reviews


  • comment
    • Author: Nuadazius
    I adore the original BBC Version. Here I am watching the Clone....squirming here. I know these words. I know this situation. OK...too soon to tell. Oh, no!

    SAME EXACT SCRIPT! How ridiculous! How pathetic...

    Sigh....the thing is - EVERYONE in America will think just how "funny" this is. I don't get it. It IS already funny...in the BRITISH VERSION!

    Is this like Shakespeare in the Park?

    Stick with the BBC Version. They did it RIGHT...the FIRST time!

    Must everything be "Americanized"? Why didn't they just show the British version so those great actors could share in the glory?

    Sigh....
  • comment
    • Author: Erennge
    I've read all the reviews so far for this show, and they're all bad. I couldn't agree more. This American-ized version sucks. If you want a really good show, though, check out the original (it's different, the characters are funnier and don't look like supermodels - thank god - and besides, the American one was 'edited' as I understood it).

    Watch the original on BBCAmerica, it's hilarious. Don't waste your time, however, with this version.
  • comment
    • Author: Olma
    Having been a longtime fan of "Coupling" (the original and better Brit version), I rolled my eyes when I'd heard NBC announce they setup an American version of this show for their fall lineup. The actors/actresses are awful, none of whom can make their lines sound believeable. They all sound as if they're reading straight from the script. Just as "Men Behaving Badly" was a smash hit in Britain, but failed miserabley here, I predict "Coupling" USA will pretty much follow the same path. Boo. Get digital cable and watch the Brit "Coupling" instead. Season 1 is available on DVD (around $25) and well worth the money. Skip the hideous American version.
  • comment
    • Author: Wen
    To say that some of us are snobs for viewing Coupling US as utter rubbish compared to the brilliant Coupling UK, is to say something completely unfounded and untrue. It is true that a large portion of the original script was used in the pilot of Coupling US, but the fact that the less-than-mediocre entrance of the US version was excruciatingly unfunny had more to do with the setting, the actors and the idea than the actual script. Please - for viewers who have seen the US version and not the British Coupling - take note: You can have the funniest lines in the world, but if they are delivered by an actor who has no grasp of the character the lines were intended for, has no comedic depth and is a mere imitation - not even a shadow - of the original character, those very same lines that you once found hilarious can suddenly be rendered lame and unoriginal. A sitcom is not only successful because of the funny lines produced during the show, but also by how successful the actors are at conveying those lines. And the actors themselves need to have some likability too. Sadly the US version falls short in every possible way. Many people have commented on how the actor playing Jeff has really disappointed fans by turning such a side-splittingly funny character into a teeth-grindingly inferior joke. But it doesn't end there - almost the entire cast is misplaced and unsuited for the characters they are portraying. Perhaps the British actors have outdone themselves to such a degree that they cannot be re-cast to the satisfaction of Coupling fans. But then, why should they have to be? The original was truly the best and I see no reason why it should have been remade. Edited perhaps, to fit into US time slots, but to be remade entirely is completely unnecessary and an all-round bad idea. The proof is in the pudding - if you don't believe me just have a look at how much this version of Coupling scored on the user rating.

    Another thing that gripes me is the misconception by people who have only watched the US version, that this show is a cheap imitation of Friends. I can't stress enough how absolutely misguided this perception is! The original Coupling has three things in common with Friends - there are six central characters, three of them are women and three are men, and the show revolves around relationships. That's about where it ends. In Coupling, sex is discussed much more openly and at times, at length. If this puts you off, then read the tagline of the original Coupling - "It's better than foreplay". This show is about sex and if that offends or bores you, then don't expect to enjoy this very much sex-orientated sitcom. Friends would be more to your tastes then, obviously.

    The argument that the Coupling characters are imitations of the Friends characters is also untrue. If you watch the original Coupling you'll notice that the characters are very well rounded off. I'm not saying the Friends characters weren't, but to say that Jeff is like Joey, Jane like Phoebe, etc. is nonsense. The characters in Coupling have more depth than the US pilot would have you believe. As writer Steven Moffat mentioned in an interview, his characters are people of extremes. Jeff and Sally are both, for example, extremely paranoid people. Jeff worries over every problem he might encounter, stresses over it, names it, numbers it, and ultimately falls victim to it with hilarious results. Sally is paranoid about her beauty, her age, her weight, her relationship status, what she wants in a man, how she wants to world to see her man, etc. Then you get Patrick and Jane, both extremely confident people. Patrick is a pioneer of supreme confidence, he has had many sexual encounters, he rarely if ever dwells on the possibility that things may go wrong and he is always pursuing his next sexual conquest. Jane, who is a self proclaimed bi-sexual and bi-vegetarian, is also a very confident person. She's sexually confident and romantically in a world of her own. A world where she imagines that she holds the key to the heart of a certain pizza delivery guy even though she has never met him. A world where she is only threatened by the concept of having to compete with God for a man's love. Then there is Steve and Susan, perhaps the most normal of the lot. They're trying to build a relationship in between the hilarious events and people that make part of their life and we have fun watching them do so.

    In short, these characters are well developed. Not only that but their personalities drive the show. The situations they find themselves in are because of the type of people they are. For instance Jeff only finds himself in a situation where he pretends to have a wooden leg in order to date a hot woman, because his terrible communication skills allowed him to say, in a moment of panic, that he had is leg amputated. Similarly Patrick's confident, sex-driven character helped along the first break-up between Susan and Steve, thanks to his cupboard of love.

    That's the beauty of the original Coupling. The characters, the lines, the actors, the setting - it all just clicked beautifully into place. To try and remake this in a different setting with the same lines was a terrible idea to begin with. And to compare it with Friends even more so, considering that the original Coupling was vastly superior in terms of situation comedy and in terms of character likability.
  • comment
    • Author: Arabella V.
    I have seen this series ... once. And that's all I needed. It is such a poor remake of the proper "Britcom" Coupling in the UK. The actors seem fake, just reading their lines from a tele-prompter. The sets are right off of a Hollywood sound stage. And the whole idea to take the script word for word from the UK version, and change some words so that it would make sense here in the USA, was the final blow. I am happy to see it off the air, and I hope that the NBC person, or persons were sacked right after. Let's hope they learned their lesson. If you want to see it properly done, buy Coupling on DVD which has series 1 and 2 out now, and series 3 should be out soon. And not to worry, they are in the process of filming series 4!
  • comment
    • Author: Arashilkis
    For those of you unfamiliar with Coupling (it means you've been living under a rock) it is a show from the great isle of Britain which is basically Friends... who have sex.

    The show is wildly popular in Britain and made a splash on BBC America, and thanks to DVD the show has been reaching a broader audience. And with anything successful in Britain, America feels that they can take it and remake it better.

    So in the same vain as Three's Company, Faulty Towers, and American idol, Coupling has been shipped to America, given a generic wrapper and dropped into the laps of the unsuspecting American couch potato. With the success and intelligent writing of the British version the American version is bound to be a success... right?

    WRONG.

    Bollocks is what I say dog bollocks to be more precise. From the first moment of casting, by the way the casting director should be shot, I knew this show as doomed for failure. Now I know they want to differentiate themselves from the original, but part of the appeal of the original show is who was cast in it. Each character in the British version was cast in such a precise way that half of the success of the show is based on the actor who performs their part. And since episode one was practically a word for word re- shooting of the original British version (minus 15 minutes since British programs run 45 minutes instead of 30) the miscasting took jokes that could and should have been funny, and made them, not, so funny.

    To make matters worse a laugh track is used to elicit laughter in areas that are, not, funny. Granted, a few times I was forced to laugh, I won't deny it, but not as much as I did when I saw the original.

    So the cast, Jay Harrington plays "Steve", Steve is supposed to be a bit of a dork, a nice guy, but not all that clever as portrayed by Jack Davenport (recently seen in Pirates of the Caribbean). Jay Harrington is not dorky, not clever, and to be honest not that interesting. Part of the reason why Steve's lines work is because of how Davenport delivers them, I realize its a pilot but Harrington has a lot to make up for.

    Jane, Steve's "ex"-girlfriend is played by Lindsay Price, a petite, attractive, squeaky voiced girl, who would make a great Susan, but is no Gina Bellman. Again part of what makes Jane great is Bellman's performance, Jane is one of my favorite characters and I can't see Price pull it off. Again, she would have made a great Susan, but not Jane.

    Speaking of Susan, Rena Sofer from General Hospital fame plays the role originally performed by Sarah Alexander. Alexander makes the role what it is, Sofer would have been a better Jane then sally, its evident the producers tried to use Sofer's appeal to make the show work, well it didn't, she was very uncomfortable in the role, Susan, a woman who enjoys sex but is embarrassed by it at the same time. I honestly don't think anything would embarrass Sofer.

    Christopher Moynihan plays Jeff, Jeff makes the British version what it is, Jeff is the pivotal role involved with the success of the show, cast a bad Jeff and the show will fail, well let me tell you, boy did they ever cast a wrong Jeff. Richard Coyle, who plays the original is fantastic, he's funny, and goofy and just so "Jeff", Moynihan is everything Jeff isn't, and most of all he isn't funny. Originally Breckin Meyer (of Clueless fame) was cast as Jeff, had he remained the show might have been more successful.

    Sonya Walger plays Sally, the self-obsessed neurotic best friend of Susan. I have to admit, Sally's my least favorite character, played by Kate Isitt in the original. Not to say that Isitt is a bad actress, she just plays the character so well, I'm annoyed. The ironic aspect of this is Walger, last seen in The Mind of the Married Man on HBO, is English, has an English accent, but for some asinine reason, they had her adopt an American accent, and a bad one a that. Walger's performance of Sally was practically unnoticeable, as I believe that most of her lines were cut to a lot for the 15 minutes needed to be cut.

    Colin Ferguson plays the well endowed "stud" Patrick, and I have to say, Ferguson is probably the only cast member correctly cast. While he has yet to pull of the obtuse confidence of the original Ben Miles, he shows some promise. There's nothing I can really say about Ferguson except if they recast the show, please keep him.

    So will the American version of Coupling even catch a glimpse of the success the original did? I would have to say with its current cast, no. Considering the original's appeal was the mix of witty dialogue and brilliant acting, something the American version lacks, its a testament at exactly how important the right casting director is. The American version was well written, but the characters just lacked any kind of appeal, it just made me long for more of the original.

    Speaking of the original, why Hollywood didn't just pump money into the original and produce more of those instead of this mess is beyond me, evidently Hollywood feels that the average American cannot bear a British accent, but then again, how did the original become so popular?
  • comment
    • Author: Gamba
    Many people say that the American version of "Coupling" bombed because they were comparing it to the UK version. In reality, the Yank version didn't stand a chance. The actors chosen were decent enough, but they just cannot recreate the dysfunction in the same way. I mean, how can you have someone else play Jeff Murdock?? Or Jane, for that matter? Not to mention the fact that they would stick to the original script word for word at some times, and then add their own material in other areas (presumeably to reach the American audience). Soooooo bad, so very, very bad. Buy Seasons 1 and 2 of the British "Coupling" instead, and you'll understand the difference.
  • comment
    • Author: Kashicage
    Just bad. Once you've seen the English version this comes across as a slap in the face to the creators. The actors are really not up to it, nothing can compare to the English cast, the chemistry just doesn't seem to be right here. And nobody else can really do Geoff the way he's supposed to be. I wasn't able to enjoy the U.S. version, it all just seemed wrong. As I have already stated the chemistry is just wrong. The cast don't really seem that comfortable with what they're doing. Since I love the original British version so much, I was expecting this to keep up the same level of quality, but it doesn't even come close. I'm not at all surprised that it was cancelled.
  • comment
    • Author: Hellblade
    I was pretty dubious when I heard that there was going to be a US remake of Coupling, but I figured, "Oh, what the heck? How bad could it be?" I should know better to say that in the country that invented Fox News and "The Simple Life."

    It wasn't just that the sets were kinda cheesy. It wasn't just that they copied the script word-for-word. No, it was that the actors were totally unconvincing. Truly awful. {sigh}

    Spoken English English is in iambic pentameter. Spoken American English is in iambic quadrameter. English English scripts spoken by Americans don't sound right because the tones are wrong. That'd have been easy to find out if anyone had listened to it. But this brings us back around to the question of why on earth they used the same script. If you wanted to hear the original script, why not just license the original show and save yourself all that money?

    I cannot believe that they didn't screen-test this somehow. The sounds of people in the test audiences eating their own left feet out of desperation would have given them a hint that something was wrong.

    Sheeeeesh
  • comment
    • Author: Sironynyr
    Someone already gave an excellent breakdown of the American cast and how they are inferior to the original. It is not that American remakes can't be done ... "Three's Company" was basically a remake of a British show, and when I caught it on air, I was not impressed ... the American version was better. Perhaps perhaps perhaps it was just because it didn't translate well. Still, it shows that just because you remake a show doesn't mean it is necessarily bad. On the other hand, maybe the key is that the show was translated to American tastes, just as "Coupling" itself took "Seinfeld" and "Friends" and translated it into a form the British could recognize. If so, this remake is a bad translation.

    It might be unfair to base this on one episode, but the problems do seem too basic to ignore. First off, the show was much more forced than the original, and had an annoying laugh track that just made it worse. The original is peopled with characters fascinated with sex but still in some sense sympathetic and human. The remake seems to be peopled with sitcom actors. All too stylish. The original was often hilarious but often restrained as well ... the remake, perhaps showing its American style, was less restrained. And, the original took place in Britian, but wasn't so "British" that was bothersome ... in fact, its British touches gave it some flavor. This takes place in Chicago, but the show has to put a sign in the bar with "Chicago" in it, since w/o that you'd have little reason to know these people lived there. Perhaps, the locale will be taken advantage of in the future, let's see.

    The original was influenced by the properness of the British symbolized by Steve, who forever seems to be uncomfortable. The fact is that this is easily translated to America ... the fact is that many men here are uncomfortable with sex, fascinated and mesmerized by it, but deep down uncomfortable and unsure of themselves. It is human nature and if handled properly, could be the basis of a great comedy. The problem is that American sitcoms have gotten in a rut in which sex is so easily handled and tossed about, so that a more restrained show (especially one following the madcap "Will and Grace") would be deemed too much of a risk.

    I will tell you what a risk is ... a nearly verbatim remake of a great show, one which many viewers could access for themselves, that is quite inferior to the original, but is so overhyped that expectations are rather high.

    -j

    PS In the original, Steve and Jane dated for years, but here, it was changed to one year. Perhaps, this is a symbol of the cheapening of the show ... in an American sitcom, one could not be together THAT long. Also, the original had a joke comparing their relationship to a husband driven to homicide ... the remake used a "Titanic" joke. Not quite the same image!
  • comment
    • Author: Ironfire
    this is something I don't get. Why is it necessary to make a bad American copy of something that was/is great. If Americans don't want to see it in the original version, then so what! They miss something great, so what! really, really sad

    I looked hard, but didn't find the negative star to rate this.

    And why doing something you know during the making-off, that it won't work out the same. You cannot transfer the brilliant humour of the original series.

    But the explanation will probably be simple and plain; the money. They always try to make some extra cash.
  • comment
    • Author: Brightfury
    I saw the original (UK) Coupling for the first time when it aired originally. I liked it so much, that I bought all four seasons on DVD as soon as they became available and have watched them over and over again ever since.

    I can truly say that I am a big fan and that Coupling (UK, mind you!) is one of my favorite series of all time. Can't beat the humor and the odd characters.

    Now I had the chance to watch the US remake. I had seen the low rating and negative comments before and did not expect much. But what I did expect were some new stories around the same, only "americanized", characters.

    I was surprised to say the least to find out that they absolutely redid the series. The same stories and sometimes word for word the same script as the original. They even recreated "the bar" more or less like the original one.

    WHY in god's name would they do that ??? It was perfect - and I really mean PERFECT - the way it was.

    Who is that sad-sack trying to play Jeff ?? Or the Paris Hilton wannabe they cast as Jane for crying out loud ??

    And most of all - why didn't Steven Moffat stop that from being made? Did he need money so desperately?

    Compared to the original, it really would deserve a solid zero. On it's own, I give it a two, since Moffat's lines are still funny. And one extra point for the gorgeous Rena Sofer. By means of character no comparison to "Susan" Sarah Alexander, but she's eye-candy and a decent actress none the less.

    Even if you are American and don't like Brit stuff - please watch the one and only Coupling and not this lukewarm remake.

    Or the Melty Man cometh !!!
  • comment
    • Author: Zulkishicage
    The American version of this sitcom is quite poor compared with the original UK version, the lines maybe almost the same but the content changes if the actors aren't able to keep up with the characters they represent. Sally and Jeff have such strong personalities and when I watched them played in the American version they seemed fragile and empty, even the jokes lacked spontaneity, so they stopped being funny...

    Where these actors forced to do the show?? They seem to be acting at gunpoint.

    What a bad idea to remake this sitcom, it should have been left alone. "when you remake it you brake it"

    Overall I was extremely disappointed with this performance and frankly I found it quite sad after seeing the original one.
  • comment
    • Author: Tejar
    Watch the British version. This version is in no way in the same league. They may have most of the same lines, and most of the same cute Jeffisms, but it doesnt have the same Jeff. The new cast doesn't have the same chemistry as the BBC cast, and it definately shows. Watch it on BBCAmerica, or order the DVD's. They're worth every penny. And not too expensive.
  • comment
    • Author: Briciraz
    This was horrible! I'm a huge fan of the British original, and this one was just terrible. You'd think that copying the exact same dialogue and just about everything else from its predecessor that this show would be as hilarious as the British version. This show is missing the charm and wit of the original.

    If you still don't believe watch an episode of each and let yourself decide.

    Note to NBC: DON'T EVER COPY A SHOW WORD FOR WORD, JUST SHOW RERUNS OF THE ORIGINAL, YOU'LL GET A BIGGER AUDIENCE!
  • comment
    • Author: Scoreboard Bleeding
    I absolutely loved every episode of Coupling UK(except for parts of the 4th season where Jeff wasn't in the plot anymore) and read all the negative reviews for the US adaptation. I downloaded all of them and let me tell you that the US version is TERRIBLE. The casting is much worse and the only thing worth laughing at is how horrible the US version is. I still think the UK version is incredible but could only get past two episodes before i deleted all of them. don't even bother. I can't think of one good adaptation of character. Jane is not supposed to be completely ditzy like she is in the American version. Jeff is much deeper in the British version. Even the Israeli girl in "The Woman with Two Breasts" is cast better in the UK version as the one in "A Foreign Affair" in the US version comes off as a slutty girl who speaks so fast you can't even attempt to figure out what she had in mind before the translation comes up. It is clear that they were trying to get from the 30 minute UK episode to the US 22 minute standard. Characters aren't developed at all!!!!
  • comment
    • Author: Malhala
    It's embarrassing to even try to watch this Americanized version of a fantastic British TV comedy. The original show's creator/writer helped develop the American version, but despite his great writing skills, the American version severely lacks in several areas. It's simply NOT FUNNY. Most of the original show's charm is how good the actors can take what's on the script and make it their own. If you compared the British version of Jeff versus the American version, it's simply pathetic how night and day the two are. British Jeff = Funny. American Jeff = Needs to go away.

    I felt my brain melting when I tried to watch the American version, it was absolutely horrible! The forced laugh track doesn't help and in fact brings out the awkwardness of how flat and unfunny the American version truly is. You MUST avoid this show at all cost and watch the British episodes on BBC America instead. Stop the madness and go watch the real thing.
  • comment
    • Author: Nikok
    I caught my first episode of the American version of Coupling the other week and I am offended! The show is awful as it lacks the character charisma of the British version. Jack Davenport is perfect as Steve because he is believable and funny and most importantly he is natural in trying to communicate comedic situations to the audience. that guy on the American version who plays Steve is a damn joke! he looks like a male model, there is nothing unique or believable about him or any of the other members of the cast. I am doubly ticked off because the episode I "viewed" was the one with Jane's dildo and Patrick as the "tripod", an incredibly hilarious episode in the British version. While we're at it, lets try to copy the Mona Lisa, the Eiffel Tower, and anything else from Europe that might make a nice addition to American pop-culture. THIS SHOW BLOWS!!!! maybe i am naive, but why don't they just air the British versions on American network television? they can't be offensive to Americans.
  • comment
    • Author: Shliffiana
    I could barely sit through this crap! It was a horrible thing too watch after knowing and loving the original. It's a cheesy mockery. Exact replicas of the original show in everything but it's magnificence. I highly doubt this will last long.

    JUST BRING OVER THE RERUNS!!!!!!!!!
  • comment
    • Author: Steamy Ibis
    This fall NBC is integrating "Coupling" into its Must See TV Thursday, and while the BBC version of the show is bold, witty, and frankly hysterical, the American version of the show falls very, very, short of its UK counterpart. The plot of the show follows six thirty-somethings as they uncover the dos and don'ts of dating. The main problem with the American version of the show is simply the cast's inability to deliver the exceptionally well-written dialogue. The majority of the cast are unfamiliar actors with very little on their resumes. While in UK the cast is comprised of seasoned actors whose training and abilities speak for themselves. Writer Steven Moffat is extremely talented and skilled writer, although his BBC program runs 40min, leaving plenty of time for the multiple payoffs in his scripts. NBC's Coupling runs approximately 21min, and cutting half the time means cutting half the humor.

    When BBC America premiered BBC's Coupling in 2002 it developed a huge following here in the US, an action which prompted NBC's purchase of the program. The show could do exceptionally well on NBC, with many viewers carrying over from popular "Will and Grace," but true fans of the program are certain to be disappointed. If the show peaks your interest, watch it Sunday night at 10pm on BBC America. Or, find season 1 on DVD, and season 2 on Oct. 28th.

    Series 1 does grow funnier as the season progresses, so there is a possibility for improvement in the NBC program. But it could end up a BBC to America flop, like other American rip-offs.
  • comment
    • Author: Nanecele
    Some comments claim that it takes a "closed mind" to not appreciate this show. To those, I say that one can have an open mind and still find this show unoriginal and trite.

    To each their own and I respect their opinions. If you appreciate this show, then fine. However some people, such as I, have given this show a fair chance with an open mind and STILL found little original or interesting within. It matters not if it's an American version of a UK series; on its own merits, Coupling fails miserably in the US version. Maybe something precious was lost in the process of Americanizing it. Whatever it is, let's sing taps and bid this show a less-than-fond adieu. We won't miss it.
  • comment
    • Author: Daigami
    I love coupling (British Version) i think it is one of the best Brit-comedy shows around, every episode is packed with hilarious situations and sexual innuendo. America has Friends which is quite possibly one of the funniest if not best show to come from across the pond. Coupling was from our point of view to show what the British person was like when seeking a love life, of course Jeff the amazingly funny Welshman does come out with some outrageous sentiments but that and the other actors was what made it so damn funny.

    I managed to download an episode of the 'Americanized' NBC version of Coupling my cousin sent me from Colorado, I watched it and thought well this is okay but it feels like the actors are forced into their roles and are uncomfortable in them. Where as in the original the characters inter-acted so well with each other, you actually thought it was what could really happen. I don't want to completely b*tch the 'new' version but i don't really think it needed converting, i mean many people from America would be able to understand and enjoy the humour. So why Americanize? Well because there is money to be made. Yes coupling is basically friends rapped in a Union Jack but at least it isn't the genius of friends written for us Brits, its pure comedy for everyone that cannot be re-written.

    Sorry NBC its just pure tosh!

    Original Coupling - 9/10 New Coupling - 4/10

    P.s I do not wish to offend anyone who likes the new coupling, just heed my advice and check out the original before you completely pass judgement.
  • comment
    • Author: Dakora
    Coupling is exactly like Friends in much the same as "Sex and the City" is exactly like "Golden Girls". Similar cast in numbers and sex. The similarities end there. Coupling is far more like Sex and the City and Seinfeld. UK Coupling's writer, Steve Moffatt, wrote this show about he and his wife, Susan Virtue (Coupling's producer), and their friends.

    The UK version of Coupling is one of the best sitcoms I've ever seen. Whether NBC can do justice to it has yet to be seen. The timing in the US pilot was off and a lot of the natural comedy seemed a little too forced. I'm hoping that this will correct itself once the actors become a little more comfortable with each other.

    But although the show is totally about sex and relationships, it's ONLY about discussing it. I've watched three seasons of UK Coupling, and I've barely seen any of them even kiss. It's all about the differing ways that men and women look at the issues.

    But we'll just have to see. Will NBC assume that America is too stupid and dumb the show down, making the jokes obvious enough so that an 8-year old will understand, or will they keep the subtleties of the original?
  • comment
    • Author: Laitchai
    Network: NBC Genre: Comedy; Average Content Rating (language, sexual content): TV-14; Classification: Contemporary (Star Range: 1 - 4);

    Season Reviewed: Complete series (1 season)

    Every once in a while a show like 'Newsradio', 'Freaks and Geeks' or 'Boomtown' will slip onto the air in between the revolving door of executives over at the Peacock network. But make no mistake about it: if we were living in NBC's perfect world their entire schedule would consist of nothing but shows like 'Coupling'. That and a few 'Law & Order' spin-offs here and there.

    I come to this series knowing full well - as everyone screams - that it is a remake of a popular BBC series from the title to the specific lines and situations. Frankly, I don't care. The fact that NBC feels it needs to remake a British show and leave a fine, home-grown American masterpiece like 'Boomtown' or 'Freaks and Geeks' twisting in the wind is it's own inferiority complex. It does send a bad message across the pond though. If NBC wants to make another country as mad as America largely is with it than it's nice to have some company. But, by the same token, if NBC's 'Coupling' really is a direct remake of the original (as, again, I'm told) I'm sure not going to run out for the DVD of that either. As bad as this cast is, as little chemistry and comic timing as they have - I can't imagine anyone making these stale, tacky, 10 year old jokes boil to the point of hilarity.

    David Zucker's team had the hype machine on overdrive for this one. With the end of 'Friends' drawing near they are desperate to find… what? No, of course, not a great original series to fill the spot - they just want another 'Friends'. And that's exactly how this 'Coupling' comes off. Like a copy of a copy of a copy. This is simple, mindless, assembly line sitcom-making at it's ugliest and most obvious. This from 'Friends' and the British version, all of which can trace their family tree back to some executive's simple-minded, mistaken view of 'Seinfeld'. 'Coupling' is all base level humor. It is a show that thinks just the mere mention of things like sex, flashing, shaving and well-hung men are just intrinsically funny. NBC is making no bones about their view of what the public will swallow. Fortunately, this time, it was too much. For once, thank God, the audience didn't buy it and as of this writing (the show went by so quickly few had time to review it before it was gone) it marks NBC's most humiliating failure in recent memory. Mark it as a notch on your victory belt, America.

    I did not give the series my lowest possible score (the dreaded half star) because that would make it 'unwatchable' and while everything on-screen is certainly cringe-inducing in every sense of the word, the show is still watch able in the sense that anything starring Rena Sofer would be watchable. Sofer is an acting (I use the term loosely) fireplug that NBC has been bouncing around for years trying to find a star vehicle for. Given the sexual nature of this show, seeing her in it every week barely clothed might have made for a half-way decent guilty pleasure. Assuming, the execs knew what they where doing. Of course, I would watch Rena Sofer read the phone book for 22 minutes. It would undoubtedly be more entertaining than 'Coupling'.

    On a final note, what strikes me the most ironic is the outcry from all the 'Friends' fans. 'Coupling' was poorly written, pandered to the simplest demographic, featured stilted, juvenile acting and vapid cardboard characters drawn in only the broadest terms - so what's the difference between this and 'Friends' again?

    *
  • comment
    • Author: Envias
    This is to anyone who feels that British humor or (humour)is dry, and prefer the 2003 version.

    Try and get some culture in your lives!!!

    With the new version it appears that the scripts are the same, along with the looks then tried to format to American tastes and censorship that it doesn't come across nearly as funny as the original on BBC America.

    I suggest you stay up an hour later and watch the original.

    Now if everyone will excuse me, I must go and watch the original
  • Series cast summary:
    Colin Ferguson Colin Ferguson - Patrick Maitland 11 episodes, 2003
    Jay Harrington Jay Harrington - Steve Taylor 11 episodes, 2003
    Lindsay Price Lindsay Price - Jane Honda 11 episodes, 2003
    Christopher Moynihan Christopher Moynihan - Jeff Clancy 10 episodes, 2003
    Rena Sofer Rena Sofer - Susan Freeman 10 episodes, 2003
    Sonya Walger Sonya Walger - Sally Harper 10 episodes, 2003
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