Dead to Me · Season 1 · Netflix
Dead to Me Season 1
Dead to Me Season 1 is a MUST-WATCH, BollyMeter 8.2/10. 10 episodes on Netflix from 3 May 2019.
Updated
What BollyAI Thinks
Dead to Me arrived on Netflix in May 2019 as a dark comedy about grief that turned out to be something more structurally audacious: a sustained mystery-thriller built on the chemistry of two leads playing women defined by catastrophic secrets. The 86% Rotten Tomatoes score from 51 critics and Metacritic 67 reflected genuine enthusiasm for Christina Applegate's Jen - a widowed real estate agent whose controlled anger masks profound fracture - and Linda Cardellini's Judy, whose warmth conceals something the premiere spends its entire run revealing. The Rotten Tomatoes consensus stated that the two leads offered 'a deeply moving relationship shaped by mutual grief.'
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The Room
“Applegate and Cardellini elevate the series above its pulpier aspects - offering a deeply moving relationship shaped by mutual grief.”
Rotten Tomatoes
Standout Episodes
The hours worth arguing about - premieres, finales, and the turning points. BollyAI reads the room episode by episode.
- E1Pilot8.4
The premiere establishes its tonal register immediately: a grief support group as the site of dark comedy rather than catharsis, with Jen's barely-contained rage and Judy's desperate warmth creating an immediate, unstable comic chemistry. Creator Liz Feldman's dialogue is precise and the season's central mystery is planted without announcing itself.
The moment: The final scene of the pilot - a revelation that retroactively reframes everything the premiere had established about Judy's character.
“Applegate and Cardellini elevate the series above its pulpier aspects - offering a deeply moving relationship shaped by mutual grief.” - Rotten Tomatoes
- E10We're in This Together8.6
The Season 1 finale delivers on the mystery setup with a twist that correctly anticipated the show's binge-driven success on Netflix. The conclusion commits to the darkness the series had been building toward while leaving the two leads in a situation that made the second season feel genuinely necessary rather than merely commissioned.
The moment: The poolside revelation - the moment the show locks in its identity as something stranger and darker than the dark comedy premise had suggested.