Here’s the official trailer for the final season of Easy, premiering May 10th on Netflix! Also check out an official production still featuring Dave in our gallery.
Here’s the official trailer for the final season of Easy, premiering May 10th on Netflix! Also check out an official production still featuring Dave in our gallery.
Netflix has announced that the third and final season of the anthology series, Easy, will premiere on May 10th!
Creator Joe Swanberg’s “Easy,” returns for a third and final season on May 10, only on Netflix. This season of the anthology series consists of nine episodes and will feature some new faces as well as many returning fan favorite characters, all of whom are navigating the modern maze of love, sex, technology, and culture in Chicago.
From Creator, Director and Executive Producer Joe Swanberg: “EASY has been the most exciting and important project of my career. The anthology format allowed me to explore a range of stories and characters, but small moments of incidental overlap, or deep relationships between characters, connected the episodes enough that we were able to build a fictional community rooted in a real Chicago.
The support, flexibility and trust that Netflix provided, combined with their global reach, made this a completely unique experiment. The fact that I was able to collaborate with so many of my favorite actors took an already dreamy experience to the next level. I couldn’t be more proud of the new season and I can’t wait to share it.”
The new seasons stars Elizabeth Reaser (The Haunting of Hill House), Michael Chernus (Orange is the New Black), Jake Johnson (Spider-Man: Into the Spider-Verse) , Gugu Mbatha-Raw (Black Mirror: San Junipero), Marc Maron (GLOW), Jane Adams (Sneaky Pete), Melanie Lynskey (Togetherness), Kate Micucci (Another Period), John Gallagher, Jr. (The Newsroom), Megan Ferguson (Casual), Sophia Bush (Chicago P.D.), Kiersey Clemons (Lady and the Tramp), Jaz Sinclair (Chilling Adventures of Sabrina), Jacqueline Toboni (Grimm), Zazie Beetz (Atlanta), Aya Cash (You’re The Worst), David Franco (The Disaster Artist), Evan Jonigkeit (X-Men: Days of Future Past), Danielle MacDonald (Dumplin’), Kali Skrap, Lindsay Burdge (Her Smell), Cliff Chamberlain (Altered Carbon), and Nicky Excitement (Win It All).”
I have added to our gallery high definition screen captures and episode stills of Dave reprising his role as Jeff on Netflix’s original series Easy (2.04 – Spent Grain). The new season can be found on Netflix, but beware that unlike last season, Dave only shows up in the fourth episode!
Netflix has released the trailer for the second season of Easy, set to be released in all countries on December 1st and by the looks of it, Dave will be reprising his role as Jeff in the series!
Big news, Dave fans! Dave is one of the many familiar faces to return to the second season of Netflix’s Easy! There is still no word if he will be reprising the same role but we know that the show will be back on December 1, according to The Hollywood Reporter. You can read the full article bellow.
Netflix’s comedic anthology Easy is officially returning for a second season with a group of new and returning faces.
The Joe Swanberg-created individual episodic anthology will return Dec. 1 on the streaming giant and continue to explore diverse Chicago characters as they fumble through the modern maze of love, sex, technology and culture.
New faces joining the franchise are Aubrey Plaza, Kate Berlant, Joe Lo Truglio, Michaela Watkins, Judy Greer and Danielle Macdonald.
Stars set to return in season two are Kate Micucci, Jane Adams, Zazie Beetz, Michael Chernus, Kiersey Clemons, Evan Jonigkeit, Elizabeth Reaser, Jacqueline Toboni, Dave Franco, Aya Cash and Marc Maron. It’s unclear if the returning stars will reprise their season-one characters.
The half-hour single-camera comedy series will, in mumblecore fashion, be written, directed and exec produced by Swanberg. He is considered one of a handful of writer-directors most associated with mumblecore, which is a style of low-budget feature filmmaking in which dialogue is improvised and, in some cases, often performed by non-professionals. (Other mumblecore filmmakers include Lena Dunham, the Duplass brothers and Lynn Shelton.)