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Con artist Maddie is as beautiful as she is dangerous. She has got both men and women to fall in love with her. Her life gets complicated when three former targets team up to track her down.
While not exactly earth-shattering television, Imposters offers some fun, light-hearted escapism, dropping a few tricks of the trade along the way. But the show made an extremely fortunate find in lead Inbar Lavi.
There are occasional laughs and bits and pieces of the concept that I like, but really the best reason to watch Imposters will be for Inbar Lavi and possibly just to get excited for what she'll do next.
It's a shaggy, ridiculous, tonally inconsistent show... But it owns its own nuttiness, which allows the audience to adjust its expectations accordingly - and makes for a fun, unexpected journey.
If you like dark comedies with a dash of slapstick and a lot of satisfying twists and turns, tune in. I'm definitely looking forward to seeing where this is going.
Imposters is an ambitious neo-noir black comedy, centered around a con artist and her victims. It's an enjoyable watch, but suffers from inconsistent tone.
An amoral, streetwise anti-heroine who is very complicated. Do you root for her or for the guys she's fleeced? That's an intriguing question and it's what propels this captivating new black comedy/drama series.
Perhaps what surprised me the most was just how sharp the writing is. Especially once Uma Thurman shows up in a reoccurring role, even an overanalyzing television cynic like me couldn't help but just enjoy the ride.