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His & Hers review – this glossy thriller is ideal new year TV

This six-part adaptation of the bestselling 2020 novel about a murder investigation is twisty, absurd and bingeable. It’s great January viewing

A woman lies bloodied and twitching her last on the bonnet of a car parked deep in a wood. Another woman arrives home bloodied, gasping with fear and for wine, and starts scrubbing her hands before clearing her flat of – well, everything.

A female voiceover intones that there are two sides to every story. “Which means someone is always lying.” Absolute nonsense, obviously, but it sounds great and more importantly it confirms what we were hoping: that we are in the presence of a glossy, efficient adaptation of a bestselling thriller and it is time to switch off our brains and enjoy (unless you are the type who likes to try to solve the mystery before the characters do, in which case, Godspeed and let me know where you get the energy from).

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His & Hers movie review & film summary (2026)

It’s gonna be a long year for consumers of the thriller mini-series. The genre is bigger than ever with the success of programs like “All Her Fault” and “The Beast in Me”. Executives at all the streamers are manically speed-reading mass market paperbacks trying to find the next buzz-worthy hit. Harlan Coben’s “Run Away” already topped charts for Netflix in 2026, and we’re back at it a week later with “His & Hers,” a high-profile adaptation of the 2020 novel of the same name by Alice Feeney. Much like “Run Away,” this is a show that doesn’t think much of your intelligence. It spirals through so many twists and turns in the final episodes that I actually went to check the book summary to see if this ludicrous plot is a product of Feeney’s or showrunner Dee Johnson. Apparently, it’s loyal to the source, which is wacky as hell. It’s one of those stories that makes so little sense when it’s done that it makes you angry, wondering why you wasted so much time on what’s ultimately a pretty gross piece of storytelling, one that uses serious issues like sexual assault, bullying, and dementia in deeply unserious ways.

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