With Apples Never Fall, Sydney author Liane Moriarty (Big Little Lies, Nine Perfect Strangers) gives her formula a big twist inward. Itās still a mystery set in the homes of the well-off, but this time the focus is almost entirely on one family where everyone knows each other well enough to suspect ā but not quite believe ā the worst of each other. In dinner table chat they all know the best place to stick the knife: the question then becomes, could one of them have done it for real?
The Delaney family seem to have it all. Well, all the money at least. Joy (Annette Bening) and husband Stan (Sam Neill) turned their Florida tennis coaching business into an empire, and then cashed in to spend their retirement doing ā¦ well, theyāll figure that out later.
Joy seems to think itāll involve spending a lot more time with the kids. The kids, who are clearly busy with their own messed up lives, have other ideas.
Troy (Jake Lacy) is the cashed-up success, a venture capitalist whoās recently divorced (much to Stanās annoyance ā seems the ex was great at tennis) but has a new love who maybe isnāt as much into him as he is into her. Brooke (Essie Randles) is a personal trainer with a secretly struggling business (this isnāt a family where you admit weakness) and a girlfriend who seems fully committed while her phone suggests otherwise.
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Down the less driven end of the gene pool, the laid-back Logan (Conor Merrigan-Turner) was earmarked to carry on the family business until he turned out to be more interested in boats and yoga. And Amy (Alison Brie), who Joy calls a ‘searcher’, is still trying to figure out what she wants to do with her life beyond ‘not much’.
Despite all their differences ā and differing treatment from their parents ā they still like each other enough for snarky group lunches and bickering over zoom calls. Which is fortunate, because suddenly they have a lot to talk about.
Vanishing
The series opens with Joy vanishing, leaving behind only a heavily dented pushbike. Some scenes move forward in time (labelled ‘Now’) as the kids start asking about their mother in a kind of ‘in every scene without Joy everyone should be asking “whereās Joy?”‘ fashion, while a string of pre-vanishing flashbacks (labelled ‘Then’) fill in the backstory.
Thereās a fair bit to fill in, mostly involving a mysterious young woman named Savannah (Georgia Flood) who turned up on the Delaneyās doorstep one night with a bloody forehead and a story about an abusive boyfriend. For Joy, she swiftly became a project to fill in her days. Stan and the kids were somewhat more wary.
Each episode after the first focuses on a separate member of the Delaneys as the mystery of Joyās disappearance deepens. This is pitched as a look under the surface of a seemingly perfect family, but itās clear from the start that thereās a lot of fault lines running through the faƧade.
The (possible) crime is merely the hook; the various family feuds are the real meat here, and while thereās a few elements of sunny Florida noir scattered throughout, Elmore Leonard or Carl Hiassen this is not.
The parents are jam packed with secrets and lies, but to a surprisingly large extent the kids are pretty much what they seem. They may have their own dark secrets, but theyāre never suspects; this is all about them delving into the murk of their parentsā relationship and dealing with the scars of their own pasts. Stan was a grumpy sod, Joy gave up her life for the family. Itās what lurks under those surfaces that are meant to keep us watching.
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Thereās still a mystery ticking away, complete with red herrings and surprise witnesses and a growing mound of evidence pointing at the worst possible suspect (how exactly did Stan get that scratch on his face the night Joy vanished?).
But this is more a look at a family messed up by driven parents not afraid to play favourites, and both Neill and Benning give great performances as the kind of parents that do love their kids ā¦ somewhere deep, deep down.
Itās no surprise then that despite the huge family tennis court and Joyās constant urging to get out there and play a few sets, nobody really seems to enjoy the sport. Thatās not a good sign.
Finding out what really happened to their mother is going to be a lot tougher than picking sides for a game of mixed doubles ā and at the moment, theyāre struggling to manage even that.
All seven episodes of Apples Never Fall are now available on Binge.
Actors:
Annette Bening, Sam Neill, Alison Brie, Jake Lacy, Conor Merrigan Turner, Essie Randles
Director:
Chris Sweeney
Format: TV Series
Country: USA, UK, Australia
Release: 14 March 2024