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A group of friends from Harvard, played by Keegan-Michael Key (Ethan), Cobie Smulders (Lisa), Annie Parisse (Sam), Nat Faxon (Nick), Fred Savage (Max), and Jae Suh Park (Marianne), are facing down their forties. With interwoven and oftentimes complicated relationships with one another, 'Friends from College' is a comedic exploration of old friendships, former romantic entanglements and balancing adult life with nostalgia for the past.
Much like its characters, Friends from College desperately needs to figure out what it wants to be -- the only problem is that unlike them, it's not going to have a few decades to do it.
It's not an uninteresting twist on the old-friends-reunite formula, but by the end of the first episode it's crowded out a lot of those actual old friends in favor of infidelity dramedy.
The cast of this circle-of-friends show is so charming, and the writing so good, you'll find yourself liking them all despite the occasionally terrible, and often awkward, things they do.
Old jokes are rehashed, old grudges dredged up, old songs played on the stereo, and since it'd take so much effort to fully catch an outsider up, the effort isn't made.