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‘Teenage Bounty Hunters’ Review: Netflix’s Sibling Comedy Is Best When Powered by Subversive Energy


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‘Teenage Bounty Hunters’ Review: Netflix’s Sibling Comedy Is Best When Powered by Subversive Energy

 

TEENAGE BOUNTY HUNTERS (L to R) ANJELICA BETTE FELLINI as BLAIR WESLEY and MADDIE PHILLIPS as STERLING WESLEY in episode 107 of TEENAGE BOUNTY HUNTERS Cr. Courtesy of Netflix © 2020

 

Though it doesn't fully crack the promise of its title, the core dynamic between Maddie Phillips and Anjelica Bette Fellini powers the show on its own.

Building a show around a pair of siblings has its challenges. Especially in the case of “Teenage Bounty Hunters” — which finds fraternal twins Sterling (Maddie Phillips) and Blair (Anjelica Bette Fellini) juggling the demands of high school and a part-time gig apprehending criminals. A central relationship around a close family bond needs a certain kind of calibration. Make the two too trusting of each other and you lose any sense of tension. Have them at each other’s throats all the time and it becomes repetitive.

 

But with Phillips and Fellini as anchors, “Teenage Bounty Hunters” avoids that problem altogether. Whether it’s in the pair’s occasional twin telepathy side conversations or in the regular day-in-review chatter, having these sisters who clearly care about each other is worth recommending the show all on its own. That persists whether they’re trying to navigate the tricky waters of high-school crushes or fledgling undercover detective work. Despite the concise way that the title brings those ideas together (and slightly edited from its original name, no less), the show is not quite as successful at getting all of Blair and Sterling’s exploits to gel as a series. But with this pair at the center, it’s still eminently watchable.

 

Almost from the outset, creator and writer Kathleen Jordan zeroes in on the dynamic between Blair and Sterling as the show’s strongest suit. There’s plenty the two disagree on: music choices, the attractiveness of their classmates, their approach to school uniforms. Those differences turn out to be assets for both them and the show when Blair and Sterling are thrust into the same unexpected side hustle. One fateful run-in brings them face to face with Bowser (Kadeem Hardison), who splits his time between pursuing suspects on the loose and managing a local fro-yo shop. After showing their resolve under pressure (and a proficiency in various firearms), Bowser reluctantly takes both sisters under his wing as cashiers and trackers.

 

When the sisters see what Bowser’s job truly entails, they’re both excited to contribute and understandably reticent on other levels. Like the way the show follows them through life at their religious private school or their family’s well-to-do Georgian social circle, “Teenage Bounty Hunters” doesn’t quite revel in those worlds as much as use them as chances for Blair and Sterling to see the inherent disconnect within them. The two love their family, but recognize how they help uphold the not-explicitly-exclusionary nature of their social club. They understand how some people draw strength from faith but are also presented with the structural ways that some use those same beliefs to restrict behavior.

 

Even over the course of the 10-episode season, those ideas are closer to regular observations than a core pillar of the show. Instead, the structure of “Teenage Bounty Hunters” coalesces around a Perp of the Week approach, with Bowser, Sterling, and Blair using their combined wherewithal to track down wanted criminals. As a team, these three are efficient in all the ways that the show needs them to be. The pair’s chemistry with Bowser has enough of the begrudging mentor/mentee spirit while still leaving enough room for all three to learn about each other over time. Sometimes their assignments don’t turn out as originally promised — seeing them adjust on the fly helps underline what each values out of this unusual business arrangement.

 

indiewire.com

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