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Eve Fletcher is an absolute woman who returns to her home in order to start a new and completely different life. Eve begins her emotional life with which she coexists differently. Now, Eve adopts an exciting new personality but faces some complex, unexpected, and exciting odds and may sometimes face different daily challenges.
All together, Mrs. Fletcher is a good story that could have been so much better had they added a few more episodes to properly wrap up the story. As it is, this works mainly as a showcase for Kathryn Hahn to get a lot more leading roles.
Unfortunately, we spend almost as much time at college with Brendan, and that's when Mrs. Fletcher shifts tonal gears and becomes a downbeat melodrama about this irredeemable, snide and smug lout.
At the center we have Hahn's glorious performance. She embraces Eve's insecurities and messiness without vanity and enhances Perrotta's original creation.
It's content to let Hahn fill each beat, no matter how empty, knowing that if all else fails, there's plenty of enjoyment to be had in watching someone who likes to watch.
Mrs. Fletcher is: another cheapening in a string of cheapenings in [Kathryn] Hahn's career as she rejoins Judy Greer and their posse of undervalued actresses to once again wander the TV wasteland looking for material worthy of their charms.
It's already a remarkable gift to be the actor who nails supporting roles so spectacularly that you wish you could spend more time with those characters, while appreciating that they haven't overstayed their welcome.