After many noble however failed makes an attempt, the world will lastly, rightly, spend a whole yr praising Rose Byrne. That start-to-finish continuity comes with a minor caveat, because the acclaimed efficiency that kicked off 2025 is similar one more likely to see it out, however that’s simply the great thing about a Sundance premiere with sufficient Oscar buzz to command a fall launch: The Park Metropolis crowd will get to fawn throughout “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” 9 months earlier than everybody else can be a part of the refrain.
In a approach, 2025’s minor haul and main elevate mimic Byrne’s regular rise within the Hollywood ranks. Whereas Ellen Parsons’ senior associates (aka “Damages” followers) have recognized for practically twenty years there aren’t 12 comparable actors who might kind a jury of her friends, it’s taken an expansive repertoire of roles to prime our favourite Aussie actor for her massive yr. By flourishing in horror motion pictures (“Insidious”), superhero flicks (“X-Males: First Class”) and blockbuster comedies (“Bridesmaids,” “Neighbors,” and “Spy”), Byrne has generated sufficient warmth to blow up into stardom.
The trailer for Byrne’s upcoming A24 awards hopeful touts her flip as “revelatory,” a “tour de pressure,” and “the efficiency of a lifetime” — accolades I’m certain are warranted, but might simply as simply apply to a completely different half, with next-to-no shot at snagging trophies, in a collection that seems destined to be missed.
I’m referencing, in fact, “Platonic.”
Co-created by Nicholas Stoller and Francesca Delbanco, the plainly titled Apple TV+ collection first premiered in Might 2023 to a collective shrug. Very similar to the workforce’s earlier collaboration did not turn into the theatrical juggernaut it deserved to be, “Platonic” flew below the radar as “one more [blank]”: “one more TV present that ought to’ve been a film,” or “one more star-driven Apple collection,” or “one more romantic-comedy that’s making an attempt to reinvent the romantic-comedy” (and even “one more Rose Byrne Apple present,” not that anybody would complain about that).
It didn’t appear to matter that these superficial assessments had been flawed. Sure, “Platonic” reunites the celebs and director of “Neighbors” and “Neighbors 2” for one more comedy about middle-age mates caught between their waning coolness and mounting tasks. However “Platonic” follows a traditional sitcom format, pairing one-off episodic adventures with a calmly serialized seasonal arc, each of which rely upon (and are subservient to) the comedian chemistry of their hilarious leads, Byrne and Seth Rogen.
And sure, these two are film stars in an Apple collection, however not like the empty energy supplied by Jennifer Aniston and Reese Witherspoon in “The Morning Present,” or the anthology construction that permits for Jake Gyllenhaal to steer the primary season of “Presumed Harmless” earlier than one other actor takes over in Season 2, or the high-minded however misguided stab at genre-bending science-fiction that turned Colin Farrell blue within the face, “Sugar,” “Platonic” is a haunt comedy. It understands that one benefit TV has over movie is time, and it offers you 5 hours per season to get pleasure from Rogen and Byrne’s intoxicating firm — with none of the exhausting self-seriousness meant to present weight to these different A-listers’ TV time.
Which brings us to the rom-com a part of “Platonic’s” easy however savvy equation. Stoller and Delbanco’s collection isn’t making an attempt to reinvent the romantic-comedy as a lot because it utilized the instruments of a romantic-comedy to look at our unromantic but equally profound relationships.
Will (Rogen) and Sylvia (Byrne) are greatest mates. Previous to the primary season, they drifted aside as a result of Will was caught in a foul marriage, however its finish led to their new starting, and the school buddies bounce again into their previous methods with each toes. She offers him a questionable makeover (full with platinum curls). He saves her from shopping for a “haunted nightmare” of a home, and forwards and backwards they go. Enjoyable! Steering! Friendship!
Sylvia and Will perceive one another, they settle for one another, and so they’re energized by one another — they’re simply not attracted to one another. Their shared enthusiasms are totally sexless. Certain, typically these passions can information them down regrettable paths, however hooking up is to this point off the desk it’s not even on the menu, tucked away within the kitchen, or lingering exterior ready to be hunted and/or gathered.
As an alternative, they bask in bouts of nostalgic immaturity — aka, rowdy nights out. She drinks a bit greater than she in any other case would, does some medication she’d in any other case ignore, and confides in Will when she ought to have been speaking to her husband, Charlie (Luke Macfarlane). He encourages this habits as a method to keep away from his personal mess — a latest divorce, a tense office, questionable mates — and spherical and spherical they go. Enjoyable! Impaired judgement! Friendship!
“Platonic” lives of their outlandish exploits as a result of “Platonic” is an actual comedy — no qualifier vital. The great occasions in a rom-com — the meet-cute, the courtship, the extreme declarations of affection — all get their moments right here, simply with a fraternal twist and a useful extension. Their meet-cute is their reunion. Their courtship is their unending camaraderie. Their declarations of affection are once they should come clean with their errors or ship robust truths or present up for one another once they actually, actually don’t need to.

That they will do that many times, for years and seasons on finish, isn’t only a sensible results of making a present about friendship, however a superb option to reap the benefits of TV’s ample narrative area. Season 2 proves the potential in Season 1: that we’ll fortunately hang around with Will and Sylvia for so long as they need to hang around with one another. She will throw him a marriage, he can transfer into her visitor home, they will do no matter shenanigans regular (and wealthy) mates rise up to, as long as they maintain bringing the comedy.
And boy, does Byrne deliver the comedy. Sharp as hell and in masterful management of her each motion, Byrne will get to go massive for sensational bodily comedy segments, simply as she excels at propping up smaller scenes with sturdy reactions and sly remarks. There’s a scene in a restaurant wherein Sylvia, whereas reeling from the consequences of a weed gummy, tries to unearth a couple of secrets and techniques from her mates, and the way in which Byrne instills her character’s false confidence into each inebriated gesture and slurred phrase is nothing wanting gorgeous. From a stable comedian premise, she builds a skyscraper of giggles, and “Platonic” offers her loads of acreage to broaden.
The collection doesn’t low-cost on the intricacies of grownup friendships both. Our central duo’s misadventures are inclined to escalate to tipping factors, forcing Will and Sylvia to fret they’re truly dangerous influences on one another. However Stoller and Delbanco (a married couple themselves) acknowledge these fears and, with out dismissing them, push ahead like true mates ought to. Shit occurs when two like-minded individuals get labored up about the identical thought. It’s extra essential to acknowledge sharing an unfiltered reference to somebody, anybody, is a rarity on this world. Relationships are exhausting. Individuals make errors. Love wins. (And there’s a motive truisms begin with the phrase “true” — or three-quarters of it, anyway).
“Platonic” excels in moments of quiet profundity. The second episode of Season 2 confronts the unusual code-switching that may occur when previous mates meet your new love curiosity, and it doesn’t draw back from reveling in or explaining the following awkwardness. Episode 4 flips the script on the trope of a pal screwing up by mouthing off to the flawed particular person on the worst time. The second half of the season shrewdly proves what makes sure individuals irreplaceable. There’s even romance in sure components, simply not the sort that results in lengthy kisses at sundown.
“You don’t mess up my life,” Will says to Sylvia. “You assist make my life higher. You’re the one one who’s sincere with me, and it’s simply simpler to yell at you than to get my shit collectively.”
Rattling. Sure. Reality! What’s simpler might not all the time be what’s proper, however “Platonic” makes it oh-so-easy to understand nice TV, and there’s nothing flawed with that.
In a couple of weeks, possibly earlier than Season 2 is even over, the dialog round Rogen and Byrne may have moved on. “The Studio” is gearing up for an enormous night time on the Emmys in September. “If I Had Legs I’d Kick You” will begin its gradual rollout October 10. They’re each nice accomplishments, and Byrne particularly deserves her flowers. Simply don’t be shocked if when everybody else is speaking about Oscars and Emmys, you’re ready to your probability to deliver up “Platonic.” It’s not the principle squeeze for both star, nevertheless it doesn’t should be — it simply has to maintain displaying up.
Right here’s to Season 3.
“Platonic” premieres Wednesday, August 6 on Apple TV+ with two episodes. New episodes shall be launched weekly by the finale on Wednesday, October 1.