'Your Friends & Neighbors' Apple TV+ Logo text [This story contains MAJOR spoilers from the Your Friends & Neighbors season two finale.)
Olivia Munn wasn’t even supposed to be here.
When Munn signed on to do the Apple TV series Your Friends & Neighbors, it was a one-season thing. But by the time she filmed episode the second episode of season one, appropriately titled “Deuce,” showrunner Jonathan Tropper asked if she would stick around. Munn tells The Hollywood Reporter now that she “waited until the end of the season to make that decision.”
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“When I was reading the first season, I really loved the idea of these people who are so wealthy that they’re not going to clock when one of their expensive watches are swiped,” Munn said. “There’s some people who just are so wealthy they don’t even know what they have, yeah? I just thought that was really clever.”
“The first time you have no idea, right? Your expectations are really low, and then for it to be so well received was so exciting,” Munn said.
But then the pressure to avoid a sophomore slump really sets in. Your Friends & Neighbors attempted to match the whodunnit mystery of season one with the introduction of a new mysterious character, Owen Ashe, played by James Marsden. Unfortunately, Ashe ends up just as dead as Samanatha Levitt’s (Munn) last romantic partner, Paul Levitt (Jordan Gelber). Well, the second time he ends up just as dead.
In the ninth episode of season two, Ashe is presumed dead after a crazy, drug-fueled night that ended with shots fired and some slippery marble. The character didn’t actually die-die until the final episode of the season, however, when his SUV ends up at the bottom of a lake. Coop (Jon Hamm), Barney (Hoon Lee) and Nick (Mark Tallman) make it out — as I write this, Ashe is still down there, and he’s not coming up (not alive, at least).
In a Zoom conversation with Marsden and Munn, I asked the guy who is now in all the TV shows and all the movies if he played Ashe any differently as “seemed dead” vs. “actually dead.”
“No, because to me, I’m always thinking about the audience,” Marsden said. “The audience has to believe he’s dead, so I just fully commit to that he’s dead. And then maybe, you know, something happens and he just sparks back to life.”
The something that happens here is ketamine serving as a late-stage defibrillator.
Ashe is, of course, not the only dead guy to not be a dead guy. The most famous one of our time is probably Jon Snow (Kit Harington) on Game of Thrones. He was stabbed in the back, quite literally, by Night Watch traitors, but revived by a witch using the power of the Lord of Light.
Anyway, Munn explains it much better than me, and we paused the interview for her to bring Marsden up to speed in great detail. He gamely listened to what Snow/Harington did, and then responded, “I did that.”
Jon Snow (Kit Harington) in Game of Thrones. Courtesy of HBO When you work as much as Marsden does, you’re bound to die a few on-screen deaths. Those odds skyrocket when you star on a show with “Dead” as the first word of its title.
“I died in Dead to Me. I died every episode of Westworld. So I die quite a bit. I don’t know why people want to see me dead,” Marsden said, adding of his personal technique: “I do closed eyes with, like, one kind of halfway open on the side.”
“I died in one show and and I didn’t tell my mom,” Munn said. “I forgot, and it was really traumatizing to her. Like, they see me — I’m dead. I get zipped up in a body bag. She’s like, ‘Why didn’t you tell me?’ I was like, ‘Mom, it’s just TV.'”
“You forget how impactful it is on some people when they’re watching,” Marsden said.
Amanda Peet, who plays Sam’s frenemy (and Hamm’s ex-wife) Mel Cooper, could not recall having died on screen. She has a painful memory, however, of playing a character in anaphylactic shock on Jack & Jill (1999-2001; she played Jack.)
“All the cast members had to lean over me to be like, ‘Are you OK?’” Peet remembered in a separate Zoom conversation. “The camera was over me, too. I was supposed to be on the ground with my eyes closed, [but] because Sarah Paulson makes me laugh so much, I couldn’t fucking do it. It was like four in the morning and everyone was so tired and so pissed. The more pissed they got, the more funny I thought it was and [Paulson] thought it was. So finally we put a scarf over my face to see if I could just keep my eyes still. So, yeah, I think it’s pretty hard.
“You feel your eyes flutter and you’re like, ‘STOP IT!’ You tell yourself to relax, don’t flutter your eyelashes, and then they flutter more,” Peet continued. “It’s really anxiety-making right now just thinking about it.”
Amanda Peet in Your Friends & Neighbors. Apple TV+ For season three of Your Friends & Neighbors, which was ordered months before season two premiered, Mel is entering into a world of angst — as if the menopause wasn’t enough of an internal struggle for one woman.
At the conclusion of season two, Mel sits down to write a new book. Not one on menopause — her editor already rejected that manuscript sight unseen — but about her life, which, about a year earlier, saw her ex arrested on suspicion of murder. Wait until “she gets on the trail and starts to sniff out” the real story here, Peet teased of season three, adding, “I’m assuming.”
(Tropper tells THR that Your Friends & Neighbors season three is “much more of a direct continuation” that “picks up very shortly after season two ends.” About a year had passed in-universe between season one and season two.)
Frankly, I’m not sure Mel can take another season like season two, which she spent much of either fighting with her daughter (Isabel Gravitt), her own body and/or her next door neighbors. She killed a dog, for goodness sake. Not that Peet minded any of it.
Peet says she was “so impressed” at how Tropper wrote the menopause storyline for her character.
“I’m the beneficiary of the fact that he wanted to make it nuanced and didn’t want to make [Mel] this insipid ex-wife who’s on the home front, waiting for something exciting to happen,” Peet said, “and I think that’s kind of rare.
“He wants it to be real and natural, but he has a wonderful sense of humor,” she continued. “Menopause is fucking funny.”
Your Friends & Neighbors season two is now streaming on Apple.
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