Critic’s Rating: 3.7 / 5.0

3.7

Disclaimer is a slow burn.

You’ll understand it within seconds of tuning in as the first two installments go so slowly that there’s a real risk that some will check out before we delve deeper into the plot.

Whether or not that will be a mistake on their part is yet to be determined, but we have Cate Blanchett, and the series is incredibly pretty.

Catherine burns the book that's written about her life.Catherine burns the book that's written about her life.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

Disclaimer’s Identity Crisis is Wildly Fascinating

Pardon the candor, but it’s a cinephile’s wet dream.

Remarkably, Disclaimer somehow simultaneously occupies the space of a prestigious cinematic adaptation with its grandiose stylistic choices and atmospheric execution and a potentially pulpy Lifetime popcorn thriller.

For that fascinating merging quality alone, the series is intriguing.

Did I mention that Disclaimer is pretty?

It’s gorgeous.

Catherine's world is upended over a book on her past.Catherine's world is upended over a book on her past.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

And it’s easy to lose yourself in the sumptuous shots and framing, various camera techniques and filters that illuminate characters, plot, and conflicts, and the way writer and director Alfonso Cuarón uses every inch of the frame and location in irrefutably gorgeous ways.

Disclaimer is Beautifully and Thoughtfully Filmed

If this is Alfonso Cuarón’s passion project, he’s having fun with it, using the series to flex his muscles and talent, at least when it comes to perspective.

It’s unquestionably pretentious, but then, that’s what you come to expect from some Apple TV+ series and the A-list star-studded limited series genre, which is set on producing prestigious and premier television.

When these many Oscar-nominated individuals occupy the same space within a project, you can anticipate the premier and prestigious component.

Jonathan continues his trip around Italy one summer in 1993.Jonathan continues his trip around Italy one summer in 1993.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

It’s fittingly meta, given that Disclaimer, based on the best-selling Renée Knight novel, is very much about perspective.

The series begins with a disclaimer and then a moment from a presenter purporting that Catherine is a beacon of truth, suggesting that the series will take us for a ride and we cannot trust anything.

It immediately puts you on edge and prompts you to put little faith in any perspectives following that.

And if those foreboding lines of dialogue weren’t enough, the use of filters, framing, and narration certainly are.

Following Jonathan’s obnoxious tryst through Italy with his equally as grating girlfriend felt like an unusual beginning to the series.

But it also came across as an odd time; even with the eventual knowledge that Disclaimer uses flashbacks, there’s this eerily timeless quality to the series.

Shock at Catherine's door.Shock at Catherine's door.
(Courtesy of Apple Tv+)

There are genuine moments when it feels like a period piece, leaving you questioning when the events occur.

Offhand, Catherine’s meeting with Nancy, presumably sometime in the past, looked like it could’ve easily taken place in the late ’50s or early ’60s, right down to their meeting place at a diner.

Catherine and Jonathan’s light, bright beach scenes had a ’70s vibe, not just because I associate with Leila George with her stellar work as a Young Smurf on Animal Kingdom.

And Robert’s classic approach feels so distinctly ’80s that, if not for shots of his cell phone, I’d swear we were in another period altogether.

It’s one of many ponderings about the premiere and series, and because of the pacing of the first couple of installments, it’s easy to get caught up in all those little details.

Stephen Seeks Revenge in Disclaimer’s Season Premiere

Catherine burns the book that's written about her life.Catherine burns the book that's written about her life.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

“To my son, Jonathan” has a lot of heavy work to do in terms of laying the groundwork for the series and setting up the central plot.

At times, it does so painstakingly when we see that successful television journalist Catherine seemingly has everything going for her before “The Perfect Stranger” appears in her life and threatens to blow up everything.

We see this book mentioned multiple times, but eventually, Catherine registers that it’s about her, and this moment 20 years ago likely changed her entire life.

Only now, staring at some rendition (Stephen’s, to be precise) of that time, does she have to face the ramifications of that moment and how it could blow up her life now.

Stepehn is still mourning his wife and seeks revenge.Stepehn is still mourning his wife and seeks revenge.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

It’s a fascinating enough premise, particularly because Kevin Kline’s Stephen has a tragically amusing enough way of coming across as if he’s about to pull the ultimate caper.

And it’s plain as day that he takes his role of exacting some revenge for his son seriously.

A Messy Stephen and Kevin Kline’s Performance Keeps Disclaimer Interesting

He’s practically giddy about it and has zero fucks to give about how he goes about executing whatever he has in mind.

Stephen is messy enough of a character to be entertaining even when other aspects of the premiere struggle to maintain one’s attention.

Those are the moments when it reads as a fun Lifetime film, where everything is extreme and overacted, but you eat it all up anyway.

Young Catherine enjoys the beach.Young Catherine enjoys the beach.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

Cate Blanchett plays Catherine straighter.

Her performance brings that serious drama and prestige as she emotes all the complicated facets of this woman we barely know.

She works alongside the second-person narration through most of the premiere, joining forces to shape this character and our perspective of her.

Despite Narration, Catherine is a Conundrum

It’s hard to say if one ever understands Catherine.

She seems like a woman in a comfortable, albeit dull, marriage with a grown son who doesn’t appear to care for her and has his own issues.

Her relationship with both men is worth deep examination, making you curious about the root of both dynamics.

Catherine and Robert at an event.Catherine and Robert at an event.
(Apple TV+)

She hates that Nicholas doesn’t connect with her and is distant but doesn’t have a similar disposition with his father.

However, we immediately see something else that suggests otherwise once we get into “Do you ever think of me?” when Robert perceives his son as a distant stoner with no real drive and a seemingly miserable life.

When you combine how we see Nicholas from Catherine’s outlook and Robert’s, it’s easy enough to conclude that he may be battling some form of depression or something else entirely.

Nicholas Has Deeper Struggles Than on the Surface

There are far deeper reasons why he’s become this shell of a person.

If that’s the case, no amount of Catherine riding his case about jobs or Robert forcing him to awkward dinners will make him become what they envision him to be.

Robert sees pictures of Catherine.Robert sees pictures of Catherine.
(Apple TV+)

Catherine’s relationship with Robert screams facade, but neither ever addresses it or unpacks what lies beneath.

Although, that’s all changed now, of course.

Stephen sending the book out was bad enough, but his hand-delivering those explicit photos of Catherine to Stephen’s office was a special kind of diabolical.

Yet, I chuckled at the audacious move to develop those photos at what probably amounts to a pharmacy store.

His dated approach to all aspects of life sparks curiosity about how he attempts to execute his plan.

Stephen Successfully Throws a Grenade in Catherine’s Life

young catherine and nicholasyoung catherine and nicholas
(Apple TV+)

But he already has the desired effect, as nothing was messier than Robert viewing those pictures and not even knowing what to do with himself.

There were so many layers to Robert’s reaction.

Notably, he looked at those photos of his wife and could conclude that she looked completely different than he’d ever seen and known her to be.

Unhinged Robert Reveals True Colors and Perspective of Catherine

Typical of a man’s ego, what struck him most was that she, in his eyes, displayed a level of desire that he’d never provided her, and that drove her to infidelity.

It must’ve pecked away at some insecurities he had always had in their relationship.

And the only thing worse than insecurities is the truth loosening the tongue and coming to light.

Catherine's world is upended over a book on her past.Catherine's world is upended over a book on her past.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

Tell us how you REALLY feel, Robert.

The final moments of the premiere were some of the most frustrating and illuminating of all.

Robert showed all his cards, spewing out some of the ugliest and most concerning takes about his wife and how he and the rest of his family view her.

All of the resentment he’s had toward her over the choice to go back to work, his insecurities about their sex life and her lack of desire for him, and how much he blames her for how Nicholas turned out bubbled to the surface the moment those pictures cracked his happy facade of his sham family.

It was pure ugliness, and between multiple tirades, it left a person wondering why he even married or chose to stay married to Catherine anyway.

Disclaimer Poses Some Questions, Barely

Catherine and her family.Catherine and her family.
(Courtesy of Apple TV+)

It sparks the question: do you ever really know someone?

Because if a loved one, someone who is meant to be the love of your life, despises you that much, how terrifying is that in the long run?

Robert was quick to anger, hasty in burning Catherine at the stake the second he saw those pictures and well before he even considered what her story could be.

His avoidance of her phone calls and texts was one thing, but not showing up to dinner was a dick move, only made worse by the fact that she deliberately purchased and cooked his favorite meal.

However, the way Robert unleashed his ire was the worst yet.

Robert’s Problematic Confrontation Has Its Contrivances

Shock at Catherine's door.Shock at Catherine's door.
(Courtesy of Apple Tv+)

He was in attack mode the entire way through, never once stopping long enough in his cruel tirade to allow Catherine to properly answer the questions he threw at her.

Catherine stammered through explanations that barely got out because before she could finish, Robert was on another segment of his tirade.

I’ll give Catherine some grace for not being assertive enough. She was stunned by what happened and fearful of the truth coming out, so she clammed up and could barely orchestrate her thoughts.

It toed the line in being frustrating, but situations where someone is yelling at you can be overwhelming, so maybe we can chalk her reticence to that.

But there’s more to this story of her supposed affair, and we need only follow her facial expressions and body language to conclude that this affair may not be what it seems.

Over to you, Disclaimer Fanatics.

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You can stream Disclaimer Fridays on AppleTV+.



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