
My wife and I just binged 56 Days on Amazon Prime. Aside from the title, I thought that this was one wild, sometimes winsome, sometimes weird, multifaceted gem of a thrilling whodunnit series, with two separate complex intersecting stories that jump back and forth from the present to the past.
One story is about the couple who have some kind of a close proximity to a body found in their apartment, no doubt murdered and turned into a chemical soup in a bathtub. The initial question is who in this couple murdered whom.
[And there will be some spoilers ahead ... ]
I began to think pretty soon that the soup could be of both of their bodies, or a third person's body altogether (which turned out to be what it was).
The other story was of the two detectives investigating the crime, an older, somewhat disillusioned guy and his younger woman partner. She's having an uncomfortable affair with a suspect (in another case), who doesn't take kindly to her efforts to end that relationship.
Romantic love in surprising places and its power to overcome all kinds of obstacles is one of the central underlying themes of 56 Days. This animates the couple associated with the human soup in all sorts of surprising ways. And a story of love rearing its head and holding its own in all kinds of unlikely situations is one of the most attractive parts of this series.
Kudos to creators Karyn Usher and Lisa Zwerling, and Avan Joglia and Dove Cameron as the couple in the apartment, and Karla Souza and Dorian Missick as the detective partners. All four gave memorable performances.
I said earlier that I didn't care for the title, and it was indeed the unexpected emotional power of the narrative that I thought deserved a more evocative title than just a number of days. The action flipping back and forth from the present to x number of days in the past is of course what generated the 56 Days title, but that narrative form would have worked just as well with any title. I know that the series is based on a 2021 novel of the same name by Catherine Ryan Howard (which I haven't read), but a streaming series that bears some resemblance to You and the movie Body Heat deserves a name at least as good as those.
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