Season: Mini Series
Genre: Mystery/
Thriller/ Drama/ Crime
Number of
episodes: 6
Year:
2026
Starring: Jon Berntal, Tessa Thompson, Sunita Mani, Marin Ireland
Description: A journalist (Tessa Thompson)
investigating a mirder in her hometown clashes with a suspicious detective (Jon
Bernthal). There are two sides to every story, and someone is lying.
Review: “His & Hers” is a psychological limited thriller series on Netflix,
based on the best-selling novel by Alice Feeney. The book is one of my
favorites in the genre and the series is overall very faithful to the source
material, with some minor changes here and there.
We meet Anna Andrews, a
journalist who comes back to her job after a hiatus. Her anchor job has been
taken in the meantime, so she is going to try it as a field reporter. Her main
story: a dead body found in her home town. There detective Jack Harper is in
over his head, never having to deal with such a case before in the quiet town.
First of all I have to say
that Tessa Thompson and Jon Bernthal have great chemistry. Thompson plays a
fragile but determined Anna, while Bernthal as Detective Jack Harper strikes just
the right balance between authority and a dark past. Their performance elevate
the story to a higher level.
The unique concepts, the
story told from both sides, his and hers, works surprisingly well for
television. In a book is easily done by switching perspectives each chapter.
But translating it to the screen is something else. It’s not as prominent, but
it’s there. You don’t know who’s telling the truth or who’s hiding what. The
series is only six episodes, but it could have been shorter too. But they chose
a slow-burn pace and it works better for the tension.
I remember my jaw dropping
to the floor when I read the twist in the book and I was really curious how
they were going to do it in the show. And it’s definitely a twist you will not
see coming. It’s very well done in the show. I can see people hating the twist,
because it’s a pretty bold choice. But I think it’s cleverly done
I don’t mind that changes
are made, when it comes to book adaptations. Some things work perfectly on the
page, but don’t translate well to the screen. There is only one change I didn’t
like for “His & Hers”. Anna’s characters in the book was written much
better. She was even more complex and more unreliable. I feel like we can trust
her side of the story more than the one of Jack, while in the book both sides
are flawed and questionable.
If you are in for a quick
binge-worthy series, with a mystery that has you hooked from episode one, I
would recommend “His & Hers”. But I do think you should read the book
first. The books is (almost) always better.