[Editor’s Note: The following contains spoilers for the entire run of “Girls,” through the series finale.]
Lena Dunham had a fun suggestion for fans of her iconic HBO comedy “Girls,” which just wrapped its final season on Sunday.
“Max Brockman is one of our writers, and he’s amazing at everything, but he’s sort of like the ‘Girls’ historian. He’s the one that went in and basically looked at each character and told us what the final thing they said in the series was and it was all very poetic,” she said to IndieWire during a recent discussion of the final season. “I encourage you to go home and play the game. You go through most of our main characters, and it’s pretty amazing what the final thing that comes out of their mouth is.”
Read More: ‘Girls’: Lena Dunham and Jenni Konner Explain the Series Finale and Why They Gave Hannah’s Baby That Name
This game sounded fun, so we...
Lena Dunham had a fun suggestion for fans of her iconic HBO comedy “Girls,” which just wrapped its final season on Sunday.
“Max Brockman is one of our writers, and he’s amazing at everything, but he’s sort of like the ‘Girls’ historian. He’s the one that went in and basically looked at each character and told us what the final thing they said in the series was and it was all very poetic,” she said to IndieWire during a recent discussion of the final season. “I encourage you to go home and play the game. You go through most of our main characters, and it’s pretty amazing what the final thing that comes out of their mouth is.”
Read More: ‘Girls’: Lena Dunham and Jenni Konner Explain the Series Finale and Why They Gave Hannah’s Baby That Name
This game sounded fun, so we...
- 4/18/2017
- by Liz Shannon Miller
- Indiewire
A review of tonight's "Girls" coming up just as soon as this is not one of my more convincing fake showers... One of the things I enjoy most about "Girls" is its willingness to experiment a few times per season, whether spending an episode away from Brooklyn, focusing only on Hannah, or in other ways deviating from its usual form and style. Those episodes can be divisive (in some corner of the Internet, I imagine people are still arguing about "One Man's Trash"), but they also tend to be more vivid and memorable than when "Girls" is trying to function as a more conventional TV show and juggling Hannah's story with what's happening in her friends' lives. What makes "Sit-In" (written by Paul Simms and Max Brockman, and directed by Richard Shepard) so special is that it's both things at once: a format-busting bottle show dealing with the immediate aftermath...
- 2/16/2015
- by Alan Sepinwall
- Hitfix
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