Mike Schur's The Good Place it was a cosmic epic about what happens when the universe is fundamentally broken. But it was also a four-season discussion of the best way to live a good life — for both yourself and the world around you. It just brilliantly inserted these questions of philosophy and ethics into a candy-coated shell of jokes about telemarketing scams and Florida Men.
Schur's new series, the Netflix comedy A Man on the Insidereunites him with Good Place co-star Ted Danson, and approaches many of the same ideas in a very different, but still hugely appealing way.
The setting this time isn't the afterlife, but it's close: a San Francisco retirement community whose occupants are keenly aware that they don't have many more trips around the sun to enjoy. Danson plays Charles, a retired college professor who still hasn't gotten over the death of his wife, and has retreated into a hermit's existence where he rarely interacts with other people, outside of clipping and mailing random newspaper articles to his daughter Emily (Mary Elizabeth Ellis). When Emily urges him to get back into the world in some way, he comes across an ad from Julie (Lilah Richcreek Estrada), a private investigator looking into a jewel robbery at the Pacific View Retirement Residence, who's been hired by the victim's wealthy son (Schur regular Marc Evan Jackson). With no obvious means of access to the facility on her own, Julie decides to send a senior citizen in there to pose as a new resident and get to the bottom of this. The job gives Charles a temporary purpose, as well as an excuse to clumsily act out various vintage spy movie fantasies.
The mystery is deliberately low-stakes
Editor's picks The series is adapted from the Oscar-nominated 2021 Spanish documentary
The Mole Agent
where the mystery was potentially far more serious: Was a resident of a nursing home being abused by the staff?
Veronica Cartwright (left) and Stephanie Beatriz Colleen E. Hayes/NetflixThe supporting cast is great, too, but often in unexpected ways. Henderson and Getz are character actors who specialize in dramatic roles, but Henderson is dryly funny as the resident skeptic, and Getz leans way into Elliot's comic abrasiveness. Stephanie Beatriz is practically unrecognizable from Rosa Diaz, the hard-edged cop she played for Schur on Brooklyn Nine-Ninespeaking in her normal register and giving off a much gentler, more empathetic vibe. Other actors like Struthers, Avery, and Ruttan
Gilmore Girls ). But even though all of them have been working frequently since their more famous roles, this feels like a bigger, better showcase than they've had in a while. Related Content Ruttan and Danson playing scenes together is something of a reunion of NBC's famous Thursday night lineup in the Eighties, when she was on
LA Law
Cheers . A benefit of making a show predominantly about people in their seventies in a youth-obsessed business is that you have access to a vast pool of talent that's no longer being fully utilized. (Veronica Cartwright, who's been working in TV and film since the late 1950s, has a smaller role as another Pacific View resident.) Charles discovering how much the world still has to offer him even at his advanced age feels almost as much a commentary on that as it does on life itself.Trending Stories
A Man on the Inside isn't as laugh-out-loud funny as the other series Schur has created or co-created (see also Parks and Recreation
). But it's smart and it's kind and it's incredibly warm, a necessary balm at a moment when the world feels very angry and cold. It's unclear what the future will bring for any of us, but getting out of your comfort zone and getting to know other people is enormously valuable at any age.All eight episodes ofA Man on the Insideare now streaming on Netflix. I've seen the full season.