The following review of Netflix’s No Good Deed does not contain major spoilers. If you’re going to comment with a major spoiler, make sure to give a warning up top.
Secrets and lies are the fuel of plenty of television series, but few spin a web of deception nearly as well as No Good Deed.
The thriller-comedy is oriented around a house. There’s nothing particularly wrong with this house, only with the people inside it. Paul and Lydia Morgan (Ray Romano and Lisa Kudrow, who make a fantastic duo here and are really playing to their strengths) are trying to sell their house three years after their son died in it (this is revealed in the first episode, so I promise I’m not spoiling anything). Or, well, Paul is trying to sell it because of the daily reminders of his dead son. Lydia doesn’t want to, because she’s convinced their dead son’s spirit is still present, communicating to her via the flickering light in his bedroom. Here are two people haunted by grief, their marriage thoroughly haunted, too.
No Good Deed opens at an open house, and the characters who filter through the house become our sprawling ensemble, all connected on a story level by the house but on a much deeper level by recurring themes of deception, manipulation, lies, and secrets. It’s a series about grief, but it’s also a series about marriage and the lies people tell supposedly to maintain those marriages that ultimately rot the foundation from the inside out. In No Good Deed, marriage is a haunted house, full of unwelcome presences. Characters lie to each other about everything from fertility to finances to affairs. And No Good Deed is equal opportunity in its depiction of marital lies; the queer characters are just as messy as the straight ones, money and class some of the main motivations that unite all these characters in their schemes. They all want the house because they see it as something better than what they currently have, and their discontent with their current statuses fuels their bad behavior. It’s wealthy suburban horror at its finest.
Abbi Jacobson and Poppy Liu play a married lesbian couple often on entirely different pages from one another, maybe even on different books. Linda Cardellini plays a trophy wife to a fledgling soap opera star (Luke Wilson) who’s banging a character named Gwen played by Kate Moennig who might as well be named Shane, because well, Moennig is playing to her strengths, too.
There’s something almost Shakespearean about the machinations of No Good Deed, characters often acting erratically and against their own interests. Whereas other series with thriller elements get off on deceiving the viewer, that’s not what’s happening here. No Good Deed twists and turns but not in trickster ways that make the viewer feel manipulated or stupid. Secrets don’t remain secrets for very long, and when characters lie to each other, we know it. As a result, it’s actually much more suspenseful and thrilling, more character study than puzzle box. It hits a lot of the same themes and beats as The Perfect Couple but does so in more coherent and compelling ways. Is it a half hour comedy with thriller elements or a thriller shrunk down to comedy length and with jokes? Trick question! Both descriptions feel too limiting for what No Good Deed really is, which is a very well crafted and acted series that defies genre prescription.
I’ve loved Feldman’s work for a long time; the lesbian sitcom she co-created with Ellen Degeneres, One Big Happy, was an underrated one-season wonder. And Dead To Me is one of the best series of the past five years, full stop. No Good Deed replicates a lot of the best parts of Dead To Me: deep storytelling about grief that also manages to be mordantly hilarious, Linda Cardellini, queer characters that don’t fit into neat boxes, a true blend of thriller and comedy genres and, it bears repeating, Linda Cardellini. But No Good Deed also isn’t just a Dead To Me redux; it’s wholly original.
It’s a great series for many reasons, but if you only need one: Kate Moennig and Linda Cardellini in bed together.
Again, if you want to comment with spoilers, make sure you make it clear at the beginning of your comment. I’m planning on doing a deeper dive into the series that will include spoilers later this week, so we can also discuss more openly there!
I found this soooo boring i couldn’t finish the first episode. I just didn’t care at all about any of it. It’s a shame because it has so many actors I like but yeah…this was deeply underwhelming. It felt hollow.
Agree! I watched the whole thing hoping it would get more engaging or funny or moving or just…anything? And it didn’t! I found it so lifeless and yeah hollow is a good description. Can’t put my finger on what it was, because I love these actors and Dead To Me is one of my all-time favourite shows. It just felt overly glossy and Netflix-ified and I didn’t care about any it
omg Autostraddle team I did NOT mean to publish my whole name in that comment, and now I can’t delete it – could you please unpublish the name or the whole comment, whichever is easiest?
There are approximately 200,000 brown bears worldwide. They can be found in North America, Asia, and Europe, with the largest population in Russia. There are roughly 30,000 in the United States, most of which are in Alaska, and only around 1,500 are in the contiguous 48 states.
(Commenting to push your initial comment off the “latest comments” sidebar with something that looks like spam.)
Brown bears are generally loners. However, when they need to communicate with other bears – such as seeking out a mate, they intentionally twist their feet on the ground when walking in certain areas; bears do this because they have glands in their feet that secrete chemicals, which can be released when they twist their feet on the ground.
(Commenting to push your initial comment off the “latest comments” sidebar with something that looks like spam.)
In the wild, bears can live to an age of around 20 to 25 years, in captivity they can live even longer. At our bear sanctuary in the Ukraine lived our oldest rescued bear, Lady M, who passed away at the age of 43.
I binged the entire thing earlier this weekend. I agree with Kayla, I watched both One Big Happy (yes underrated) and Dead To Me. I think Liz Feldman has really honed and owned her craft with each series. The equal blend of sad and funny kept me engaged. Grief can be messy. It wasn’t boring as the other commenter stated, especially if a person didn’t get passed the first 30 minute episode. Great cast. There were some callbacks to other Luke Wilson roles that I’m sure I missed the same thing with others actors. I feel like Kate was meant to be a “Shane” on purpose but she does it effortlessly, come on. Lol. Also I love Poppy Liu. They gives good vibes.
I will watch Kate do Shane for the rest of my life without complaint, let’s be honest!
Watched this show this weekend while cat sitting for my sister and while sure, you could call it a little bit boring, it’s so fun! I posted this shot of Kate and Linda kissing to my story and it’s the most story views I’ve gotten in a really long time (3.5k +) and had to tell everyone what show it was!!
I read that Abbi Jacobson and Poppy Liu played a married couple so I started watching, and then it was like a bonus surprise that there was even more lesbian content! And that said content included Shane! What a blessing to our people 😄