Tag: alexis bledel

  • Eight Great Summer Vacation Movies

    Eight Great Summer Vacation Movies

    Meatballs

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    Sometimes overlooked in favor of other “slobs vs. snobs” comedy classics from the same era, like Animal House and Caddyshack, this was Bill Murray’s first starring role, and the feature directorial debut for Ivan Reitman. Murray stars as Tripper, head counselor at Camp North Star, a bargain-basement summer camp in Ontario. Murray takes the lonely Rudy (Chris Makepeace) under his wing while still overseeing a group of oddball counselors-in-training as they have their own romances, pull pranks on the camp’s director, and take on wealthy Camp Mohawk in a yearly tournament. It’s ultimately a sweet story, without ever getting quite as crass as some of the era’s other films starring Saturday Night Live alumni. ‘Meatballs’ would turn out to be hugely successful, spawning three mostly unrelated sequels and countless knockoffs.


    Wet Hot American Summer

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    If ‘Meatballs’ saw plenty of lesser imitations, ‘The State’ alumni David Wain and Michael Showalter stepped up with a satirical take on summer camp movies. Although it bombed at the box office, it’s since become a cult classic, spawning two series on Netflix (one prequel and one sequel). There’s an amazing cast here, including Bradley Cooper, Paul Rudd, Elizabeth Banks, Amy Poehler, Judah Friedlander, Janeane Garofalo, Christopher Meloni, and David Hyde Pierce, plus other alumni from ‘The State,’ such as Ken Marino, Michael Ian Black, and Joe Lo Truglio. There’s a plot here about the camp putting on a talent show, counselors in love, and a falling piece of Skylab that threatens everyone’s lives, but it’s really just an excuse to see some stars and future stars show off some great comic chops.


    Dirty Dancing

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    For those that haven’t gotten around to seeing this classic, it’s easy to write off ‘Dirty Dancing’ as sappy romance. But that would be wrong. It’s an emotionally satisfying coming-of-age story about Frances “Baby” Houseman (Jennifer Grey) and her steamy summer romance with dancer Johnny (Patrick Swayze). The dancing is terrific, Grey and Swayze have terrific chemistry. Written by Eleanor Bergstein and based on her own summer trips to the Catskills, Baby’s adventure starts because she and her family are taking a summer vacation at Kellerman’s a tony resort. Baby sees hints of classism between some of the staff, and she finds herself drawn more to the working class staffers instead of the Ivy League-bound waiters. The film subversively gives Baby agency, letting her pick her own friends and make her own choices in her sex life; she has a summer fling with a sexy dancer and isn’t punished by fate for it. That was fairly groundbreaking in 1987, and is (sadly) might still be considered unusual in some corners even now.


    National Lampoon’s Vacation

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    This is another film that started a franchise, but the original version is still the best. Based on screenwriter John Hughes’ own National Lampoon story about a disastrous road trip, the movie focuses on the Griswold’s drive from Chicago to California for a visit to a thinly-veiled version of Disneyland called “Wally World.” Chevy Chase puts in a legendary turn as Clark, the increasingly obsessive patriarch of the Griswold clan. Clark is going to have a great road trip with his family whether they like it or not, and if he becomes Ahab in a station wagon, then so be it. Beverly D’Angelo hits just the right notes as Clark’s wife Ellen, as does Anthony Michael Hall and Dana Barron as their children Rusty and Audrey. Chase and D’Angelo would return for sequels, and it became a running joke that Rusty and Audrey would be recast in every subsequent film. This first adventure sees car trouble in the desert, an unwanted passenger, a temptress in a Ferrari, and a visit with Cousin Eddy (a reminder of when Randy Quaid was funny). It’s filled with laughs, but it will definitely make you think twice about future family road trips.


    Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants

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    Based on the best-selling YA novel by Ann Brashares, this is the story of four teen girls, best friends since childhood, who are about to spend their first summer apart. But before three of them leave town, the quartet go shopping and find a pair of jeans that magically fit each one of them. The four decide that they’ll share the pants for the summer, and while each of them have these mysterious jeans in their possession, their individual summers are upended. Blake Lively, America Ferrara, Alexis Bledel, and Amber Tamblyn play Bridget, Carmen, Lena, and Tibby (respectively). The movie captures the charm of the novel, in no small part because of the charisma and chemistry of the stars, and it’s ultimately a heartwarming tale about female friendships and the bonds young women make that can last a lifetime.


    Girls Trip

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    The annual Essence Music Fest takes place in New Orleans every 4th of July, and that’s the backdrop for Ryan Pierce’s (Regina Hall) attempt to reunite with three of her friends from college. Pierce is a bestselling author and lifestyle guru, poised to be “the next Oprah.” She’s scheduled to speak at the festival, so she invites her college friends to join her, in the hopes of rekindling their friendships. These other three have lives of their own now; Sasha (Queen Latifah) is a celebrity gossip blogger, Lisa (Jada Pinkett Smith) is a working single mother, and Dina (Tiffany Haddish) is still party-girl Dina, all these years later. These four actors are great together, but Tiffany Haddish is a revelation here, stealing the movie and never giving it back. The film isn’t afraid to remind us that women can and do party hard, but it doesn’t lose sight of these friends repairing burned bridges and reaffirming their love for each other.


    Barb and Star Go to Vista Del Mar

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    One of the casualties of quarantine is that this film didn’t get a proper theatrical release. That’s a shame, because as funny as this movie is, it would have been even more side-splitting with a big audience. Make no mistake, this movie is straight up bananas from beginning to end. Kristen Wiig and Annie Mumolo wrote the script and star as Star and Barb, two middle-aged best friends that talk a bit too much, they can be both clueless and timid, but once they hit Vista Del Mar, the movie all but explodes into mayhem. To describe too much would be to take away some of the stunningly insane jokes packed wall-to-wall across the entire film. But suffice to say you may never look at Jamie Dornan the same way again.


    The Endless Summer

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    This is one of the first and probably still the best surf movie ever made. Director Bruce Brown follows two surfers, Robert August and Mike Hynson, as they leave Southern California and travel to surf spots around the world, including South Africa, Ghana, Nigeria, Tahiti, Senegal, New Zealand, Hawaii, and Australia. Brown’s breezy narration is a far cry from the stiffer voices heard in most documentaries at the time, and it lends an inviting tone to the gorgeous cinematography of the both surf action and the local landscapes. This documentary might help non-surfers understand the appeal of surfing more than any other film ever made, and the idea of an “endless summer” means its welcome on any day of the calendar year.

  • Female Filmmakers in Focus: director Elza Kephart discusses ‘Slaxx,’ plus a look at ‘Traveling Pants 2’

    Female Filmmakers in Focus: director Elza Kephart discusses ‘Slaxx,’ plus a look at ‘Traveling Pants 2’

    Welcome to Female Filmmakers in Focus, where you will find a recommendation for films directed by women to seek out each week. This week features the horror film ‘Slaxx,’ an interview with the film’s co-writer and director Elza Kephart, and pairing with another film about magical pants: Sanaa Hamri’s ‘The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2’

    ‘Slaxx’ (2021) – Co-written and directed by Elza Kephart

    Director/co-writer Elza Kephart on the set of ‘Slaxx’

    ‘Slaxx’ follows wide-eyed teenager Libby (Romane Denis) on her first shift at supposedly eco-friendly fashion boutique Canadian Cotton Clothiers or CCC. Stuck working a night shift on the eve of the launch of a new product – super shaper jeans that shift to fit anybody type, Libby learns what we all learn on her first job: work sucks. Co-workers can be jerks, managers egotistical, PR girls cold, company policy absurd. However, as the night progresses she quickly learns that the evil that lurks behind corporations may be even more sinister. With campy gore reminiscent of Italian Giallo slasher films, ‘Slaxx’ is filled with terrific horror set pieces and an ending shot you won’t long forget.

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    Read on for an interview with ‘Slaxx’ director/co-writer Elza Kephart

    Inspired by films like ‘Star Wars’, ‘Back To The Future’, and Italian horror films of the 60’s and 70s, Elza Kephart started writing scripts when she was a teenager. After graduating from film school at Emerson College, Kephart worked on the sets of American films shot in Montreal. She made her feature film directorial debut with 2004’s ‘Graveyard Alive: A Zombie Nurse in Love.’

    Moviefone: Why did you decide to tell a story about the dark side of fast fashion?

    Elza Kephart: I’ve always been really fascinated and repulsed at how corporations manipulate and convince us to buy things that we don’t really need. It wasn’t always about fast fashion. It’s been about body creams to dolls to Cheetos. It was a general hatred of corporate brainwashing that’s been with me for many years. My co-writer Patricia Gomez worked in retail, so when we came up with the idea for ‘Slaxx’ we decided the right setting for it was a retail store. I did research into fast fashion and when I realized how horrific it actually was, it seemed like a natural fit for a horror film.

    MF: Did you always think you’d be a horror filmmaker?

    EK: I’ve always loved horror. I’ve always liked darkness. I started reading Agatha Christie when I was young and my friends were reading The Babysitter’s Club. To me, if there wasn’t a death in what I was reading, I wasn’t interested. So I’ve always just really loved the genre. I loved Anne Rice and Chistopher Pike and all that stuff. Making horror films came about after college. I didn’t think I was necessarily going to make horror films, but then Patricia and I decided to make a zombie movie together as a joke, which became my first feature. I did visual research to prep myself for that film ‘Graveyard Alive: A Zombie Nurse in Love’, which was a 1960s-set B-movie. As I started to watch all these films again, I had been going to Fantasia (a horror film festival in Montreal) since I was young, I realized this is what I loved. I love these dark weird, disturbing tales. These were the kinds of stories I wanted to tell.

    MF: What do you hope audiences take away from this film?

    EK: A couple of things: First, I hope people enjoy it as a gory insane horror film. I want people to laugh and to be entertained, to watch killer pants come to life! Second, I hope people come to think about their consumption habits, that instead of buying something new, they first ask themselves if they really need it, and if they do, whether they can buy it second hand, repurpose or trade it. And if they can’t, then to try as much as possible to buy from companies that are ethical. I think we’ve been brainwashed by corporations to buy without thinking so it’s really important for people to realise that they have real power in not buying, in not giving in to the lure of buying things we don’t need. Choosing not to buy can become a political act! It’s crucial that, because of the looming climate and ecological crises fueled in part by over production and over consumption, we must rethink our relationship to consuming if we are to survive as a species.


    The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2 (2008) – directed by Sanaa Hamri and written by Elizabeth Chandler

    (L to R) America Ferrara, Amber Tamblyn, Blake Lively, Sanaa Hamri, and Alexis Bledel on the set of ‘The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2’

    Moroccan-American filmmaker Sanaa Hamri cut her teeth directing music videos for icons like Prince, Mariah Carey, Nicki Minaj, Lenny Kravitz, and Christina Aguilera. Her feature films include ‘Something New’ stars Sanaa Lathan and Simon Baker, ‘Just Wright’ starring Queen Latifah and Common. She’s also directed countless episodes of television, including more than a dozen episodes of ‘Empire.’

    If you want more pants that miraculously fit any body type try ‘The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants 2.’ A direct sequel to the first film directed by Ken Kwapis and written by Delia Ephron Elizabeth Chandler, both are adaptations of books by Ann Brashares. They follow four friends – Tibby (Amber Tamblyn), Carmen (America Ferrera), Bridget (Blake Lively) and Lena (Alexis Bledel) as childhood friends who come of age apart from each other. The first film in the franchise follows their first summer apart ever, the second follows them the summer after college. Over the course of the films, the magical pants don’t murder anyone, but rather give these girls confidence to grow into the women they’re destined to become, while also reminded them they’ll always have each other when things get rough.

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  • ‘The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants’ Is Being Adapted Into a Stage Musical

    ‘The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants’ Is Being Adapted Into a Stage Musical

    The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants
    Alcon Entertainment/Warner Bros.

    Hey, if “Mean Girls” can do it…

    The Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” came out in 2005 as an adaptation of Ann Brashares’ 2001 novel. Stars Amber Tamblyn, America Ferrara, Blake Lively, and Alexis Bledel returned for the 2008 sequel, and a third film is said to be in the works.

    But now a stage musical is coming too.

    According to Entertainment Weekly, Alcon Entertainment and Alloy Entertainment announced that Tony-winning producer Scott Delman (“Mean Girls”) and his Blue Spruce Productions have acquired the live theatrical rights for the property. The stage adaptation will be based on the films (as opposed to the novels, apparently), following four best friends who share a magical pair of pants.

    No further details have been shared at this point. They’ll probably cast newbies as teen characters, but it would be so amazing to see the four original stars — now in their 30s — reunite both for a third movie and for the stage musical. We can dream.

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  • Alexis Bledel Reveals ‘Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants’ Cast Has Pitched Third Movie

    'Paint It Black' New York Premiere - After PartyThe “Sisterhood” is ready for its third act.

    Alexis Bledel, America Ferrera, Blake Lively, and Amber Tamblyn have remained close friends since they first starred together in 2005’s “Sisterhood of the Traveling Pants” and its 2008 sequel. And in recent years, they’ve often reunited to support each other’s work. But they’ve also talked about reuniting on the big screen.

    Now, a third movie is closer than ever to actually happening, as Bledel (currently starring on Hulu’s “The Handmaid’s Tale”) told Jimmy Fallon on Thursday’s “The Tonight Show.”

    “We just pitched a third movie,” she revealed. “I hope it comes together. It would be so great.”

    The time seems right for a revival, a decade after the second film. And revivals are big these days; Bledel herself was in the Netflix’s “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” follow-up.

    Lively also recently added fuel to the fire at CinemaCon, saying, “I think it could really happen.”

    “I think that people who love the movie want to see it. So, I mean, fans have gotten bigger movies made,” she added. Then, referencing husband Ryan Reynolds’ biggest hit, “‘Deadpool’ is all thanks to the fans. So I’m saying we’ll do it.”

    And of course, the pants always fit!

  • ‘The Handmaid’s Tale’ Season 2: Alexis Bledel Admits Emily’s Future Looks Bleak

    “The Handmaid’s Tale” Season 2, but we wouldn’t necessarily put our money on her character surviving it.

    Possible Season 2 spoilers ahead!

    Based on what the actress recently told EW, banished handmaid Emily (also known as Ofglen and later Ofsteven) has hard times ahead of her. At best, we expect her to get horribly sick after being sent to the Colonies. The punishment does include cleaning up toxic waste, after all.

    “Anyone in Gilead would be terrified to be sent to the Colonies,” Bledel told EW. “Everything from the soil the unwomen turn over to the water they use to wash is toxic in the Colonies, so a person’s health begins to rapidly deteriorate as soon as they get there. They know they will die there, all the while forced to do hard labor without decent food to eat or clean living conditions.”

    As a scientist in the days before Gilead, Emily likely understands the dangers better than most. Sadly, it sounds like she is pretty resigned to her fate.

    “Emily does not have a great deal of hope for a future there; she knows her days are numbered,” Bledel said.

    The actress previously admitted to Seth Meyers that it can be hard to watch the show because the dark subject matter leaves her feeling “tortured.” Given her character’s trajectory, we doubt she’ll change her mind in the upcoming season.

    “The Handmaid’s Tale” Season 2 premieres April 25 on Hulu.

  • ‘Gilmore Girls’: Lauren Graham Calls Final Words a Cliffhanger, ‘Not an Ending’

    Gilmore Girls: A Year in the LifeWe’re not still the only ones reeling over the final four words of the “Gilmore Girls” revival.

    “A Year in the Life” dropped a big bombshell in the final seconds of the four-part Netflix installment, and it blindsided even the show’s stars. Both Lauren Graham (Lorelai) and Alexis Bledel (Rory) were candid about their reactions during Deadline’s The Contenders Emmys panel on Sunday.

    “It was a complete surprise to me — and that’s not an ending, that’s a cliffhanger!” Graham said of — spoilers ahead if you haven’t finished “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” — Rory’s surprise pregnancy.

    Bledel hadn’t seen it going that direction, either. She told the audience that she had been hoping to see her character “end on a high note.” Apparently, the life she envisioned for the youngest Gilmore girl didn’t include so many setbacks or a pregnancy with one of three less-than-ideal options: an engaged ex, the world’s most boring boyfriend, or a one-night-stand Wookiee.

    It certainly wasn’t the ending I was expecting,” she said, adding that it was “a hard thing … to digest.”

    Yet, while both women imagined the revival wrapping up differently, they don’t necessarily feel like more “Gilmore Girls” is in order. They’ve explained as much in the past and they expounded on their thoughts during the panel. Ultimately, they seem to respect creator Amy Sherman-Palladino’s story and voice.

    I don’t know if there is a need to do more,” Graham said. “I would never want it to feel like we overstayed our welcome.”

    To return for more “Gilmore Girls,” she’d want it to be “the best thing” for the characters — a sentiment Bledel echoed.

    “I think for me it comes down to what story we’re telling,” Bledel said. “I’m just interested in telling a story that is dynamic and that I sort of relate to and can hook into.”

    So far, the actors haven’t been approached about continuing the Netflix revival, according to Graham. That doesn’t mean there hasn’t been plenty of speculation, though. We’ll have to wait to see what the future holds, but at least neither Graham nor Bledel has ruled out the possibility of another return to Stars Hollow entirely.

    [via: Deadline]

  • Not Even Alexis Bledel Knows if There Will Be More ‘Gilmore Girls’

    Gilmore GirlsAmong the many, many questions “Gilmore Girls” fans had after Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,” one query stands out: Will there be more “Gilmore” in the future? Not even the show’s creator or actors know the answer to that yet, and that includes titular star Alexis Bledel.

    Bledel addressed the future of “Gilmore” during an appearance at the Television Critics Association winter press tour this weekend, telling the assembled journalists that “A Year in the Life” was the result of a special set of circumstances. The ball really got rolling on the revival after the cast reunited at the 2015 ATX Fest, the actress explained, and there were two key factors that were necessary for it to come together in the first place — and would need to happen again should Netflix decide it wants to make more.

    “I think most of us are just wanting to tell a good story, and I think that came together in ‘A Year in the Life,’” Bledel told the TCA crowd. “The only thing I can say about a future installment of the show is it would be about the story and certainly the timing.”

    According to The Hollywood Reporter, the actress also “stressed that there have been no talks about more episodes,” and told the crowd, “I haven’t heard anything. It hasn’t been a conversation as of yet.”

    Furthermore, Bledel said the decision would have to come down to “Gilmore” creator Amy Sherman-Palladino, who carefully shepherded the revival series with some very specific ideas — like those famous “final four words” — in mind. And that includes any speculation about the identity of (SPOILER ALERT) the father of Rory’s unborn child, too.

    “It all lives in Amy’s imagination,” Bledel explained. “She has a very clear vision and always has.”

    It certainly seems like fans want another installment of “A Year in the Life.” We’ll have to wait and see if Netflix and Sherman-Palladino grant that request.

    [via: The Hollywood Reporter]

  • Filming Rory and Dean’s ‘Gilmore Girls’ Sex Scene Was Super Awkward

    gilmore girls, rory, dean, sex sceneWe’ve all heard actors and actresses claim that filming sex scenes is an extremely awkward experience, but according to the stars behind one memorable “Gilmore Girls” moment, there was a specific, size-related reason that things got weird while depicting the deed.

    Alexis Bledel and Jared Padalecki, who play Rory and Dean, recently chatted with Entertainment Weekly about shooting the first time that their characters slept together on the show. The shocking hook-up — which occurred in the season four finale (and is shown in a little more detail in the season five premiere) when a married Dean cheats on his wife and Rory loses her virginity — is certainly one of the most memorable moments in “Gilmore” history, but as Bledel and Padalecki tell it, they’ll always remember filming the scene in question for an entirely different reason: trying to fit together on Rory’s ridiculously small bed.

    “It was like a miniature twin,” Bledel recalled to EW. “In the outtakes I fell off that bed a couple of times.”

    Padalecki also remembered Bledel taking a tumble or two, and admitted that he used the camera angle to his advantage when trying to fit his tall frame onto the mattress.

    “My feet definitely were off it,” the actor told EW. “There was a shot where my waist to my head was laying on the bed but my legs were counterbalancing me on the floor so that I wouldn’t roll off. … It works for the scene because it was supposed to be awkward, so maybe that’s why they bought the smallest bed on the planet.”

    Ah, the magic of television.

    According to “Gilmore” creator Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life.” Will she have anyone sharing her mattress in the Netflix revival? We have some theories, but we’ll find out for sure when the new episodes debut on November 25.

    [via: Entertainment Weekly]

  • Weep With Joy, the ‘Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life’ Trailer Is Here

    Gilmore GirlsWhere they lead, we will follow!

    Joy, oh joy — the trailer for the Netflix revival “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” is finally here. We’ve salivated over the teaser video, the retrospective featurette, posters, photos … but here, now, is our glorious Holy Grail of Coffee. Just watch and try not to happy-cry:
    OK, now that you’ve watched a couple dozen times and gone through a box of tissues, let’s break it down. Both Lorelai (Lauren Graham) and Rory (Alexis Bledel) seem to be going through major changes in their lives. Rory is jobless, credit-less, and aimless. “I coulda been a contender,” she moans to Jess (Milo Ventimiglia). “You’re still a contender,” he replies.

    As for Lorelai, her future “seems hazier.” She also adamantly declares that she and Luke (Scott Patterson) are happy — as if to convince herself. Meanwhile, Emily (Kelly Bishop) is trying to pick up the pieces of her life after the (sob!) death of Richard (Edward Hermann).

    The trailer also gives us glimpses at all the things we love about “Gilmore Girls”: Lorelai and Rory stuffing their faces with junk good and coffee, awkward Friday night dinner (with Kirk!), Taylor lording over a meeting, and Sookie (Melissa McCarthy) having a little accident in the kitchen.

    “Haven’t done that for awhile,” Lorelai says with a grin. Rory smiles. “Felt good!”

    Yes, it does!

    All four 90-minute episodes of “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” begin streaming Friday, Nov. 25 on Netflix.

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  • New ‘Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life’ Posters Are a Seasonal Delight

    We’re now just over a month away from the release of “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life,” and Netflix is rewarding fans for their patience by releasing four brand new posters for the revival series.

    The one-sheets celebrate the new episodes’ seasonal theme, with each one representing a specific season/episode: Winter, Spring, Summer, and Fall. Lorelai (Lauren Graham) and Rory (Alexis Bledel) appear on each poster, smiling and posing with season-appropriate props, including snowflakes, bouquets of flowers, sparklers and a flag, and falling leaves. (You can probably figure out which posted corresponds to which episode based on those items.)
    gilmore girls, a year in the life, netlfix, posters, seasons, rory, lorelaigilmore girls, a year in the life, netlfix, posters, seasons, rory, lorelaigilmore girls, a year in the life, netlfix, posters, seasons, rory, lorelaigilmore girls, a year in the life, netlfix, posters, seasons, rory, lorelai
    They’re striking, beautiful images that perfectly capture the excitement that this revival has generated, and the essence of the series overall. And they’re in keeping with what we’ve seen so far from “A Year in the Life,” staying true to the warm, witty tone that made the original series run such a beloved fan favorite (and made it such a no-brainer decision for Netflix to bring it back from the dead after a nearly decade-long absence).

    Of course, we know that it’s not all fun and games with the revival, with the death of Richard (the late Edward Herrmann) hanging over the series, and informing some big life decisions on the part of Lorelai, Rory, and Emily (Kelly Bishop). How our “Girls” handle that loss will no doubt be bittersweet, but then again, moments of poignancy are also a classic “Gilmore” trope, too.

    “Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life” debuts on Netflix on November 25.

    Photo credit: All images courtesy of Netflix