Dudes review do teenage girls really tell their dads to have prolific sex?
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Dudes review  do teenage girls really tell their dads to have prolific sex?
"He is tall, dark, handsome, high-earning, married to an increasingly influential influencer, and he and his immaculate facial hair are on the verge of promotion to CEO of the magazine publishing company he has worked at for the last 20 years. But what's this? He is denied his dues by the advent of Vanessa (Jaela Probst), a hot-in-all-senses businesswoman brought in from outside by the boss to shake things up."
"Playboy Erik (David Rott) meanwhile has almost the opposite problem. He is ready to give up his lover and get engaged to his long-term fiancee Kim (Marleen Lohse), the lucky girl. But she wants to open up their relationship! This revelation plays out over a dinner date in which he has oh, the comic innovation gets everywhere! hidden the engagement ring in her favourite pudding, but ends up having to eat it himself. Later, he has to poo it out. Try to contain your hysterical laughter."
Dudes follows four middle-aged men — an alpha male, a sad sack, a playboy and an intellectual — across eight sitcom episodes. The series adapts Spanish Machos Alfa and frames Ulf’s threatened promotion, Andi’s stress-induced fatigue, Erik’s bungled engagement and Cem’s divorced-intellectual role. Comic beats concentrate on sexual awkwardness, bodily humor and farce, including an engagement ring hidden in pudding and an exposed butt-plug scene with children present. The comedy frequently leans toward juvenile shock gags and recycled setups, trading subtlety for crude, attention-grabbing moments that dilute character depth and humor sophistication.
Read at www.theguardian.com
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