
A new show on HBO Max is quickly becoming a hit! It jumped to number 5 on the Top 10 streaming list right after its release, proving that people love a good drama. Though it’s advertised as a comedy, be prepared for a wide range of emotions – it’s funny, suspenseful, and even scary at times.
The new series Neighbors, a collaboration between A24 and HBO Max and executive produced by Josh Safdie, feels like a reality show mixed with a documentary. However, all the conflicts shown are real, not staged. The show focuses on dramatic and often unbelievable neighborhood disputes across the country, offering a glimpse into the lives of everyday Americans. Neighbors doesn’t offer easy solutions or take sides; it asks viewers to decide for themselves who to support, which has frustrated some audiences who prefer a clear resolution.
Neighbors is Not What Anyone Expected
Like many of Safdie’s films, Neighbors focuses on characters often considered outsiders – like psychics, former dancers, and an unconventional college student pursuing a music career. However, beyond the quirky characters, the series reveals a larger point: after the isolation of COVID-19, people seem to have forgotten how to connect and share spaces with one another, and by avoiding that connection, we risk losing what holds society together.
I’ve been spending a lot of time reading reactions to this show online, and it’s fascinating! So many people feel like the creator, Tim Robinson, basically found the most ridiculous neighborhood squabbles on social media and turned them into this series. One viewer put it perfectly – you’re not supposed to like any of the people involved, they’re all flawed and have points, but are also clearly… a lot. It reminded them of those ‘It’s Florida, Man’ videos – just pure, chaotic entertainment. What’s really striking is how the show doesn’t take sides or offer any real guidance. I saw one comment that really hit home: the show doesn’t bother with actual laws or ordinances, it just lets everyone air their grievances. That means, as a viewer, you’re left to decide who’s ‘right’ based on how you feel, not on any objective truth.
Director Dylan Redford, Robert Redford’s grandson, recently told the New York Times the series was created because he and his team wanted to understand the chaos they were witnessing online. He explained they felt overwhelmed by the intensity of online conflicts, and then started hearing intriguing stories about what happened before the viral videos surfaced – details that provided crucial context.
Overall, Neighbors is definitely worth watching all six episodes. It’s unusual and suspenseful, and while the distinctive, wide-angle filming style might not appeal to everyone, the series offers a fresh and thought-provoking look at modern society.
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2026-02-16 23:10