Starring: Jon Bernthal, Tessa Thompson, Sunita Mani, Chris Bauer, Marin Ireland, Pablo Schreiber, Poppy Liu, Rebecca Rittenhouse, Crystal R. Fox
His & Hers meanders its way through its whodunit plot with sidebars on less interesting topics, such as the relationship between estranged spouses Detective Jack Harper (Bernthal) and Anna (Thompson), a TV news reporter covering a small-town murder of a woman both knew very well. Jack was having sex with her on the night she was murdered, and Anna knew her from their private school days, although not in the biblical sense. Jack, of course, would become a prime suspect if it were discovered that he knew the victim intimately. Anna has demons of her own to deal with, including the death of hers and Jack's infant daughter which causes Anna to disappear from her husband's life for a year.
There isn't much chemistry between Anna and Jack. Anna's rival is Lexy (Rittenhouse), the young blonde who is a fast-rising star at Anna's Atlanta news program. Anna is also sleeping with Lexy's cameraman husband Richard (Schreiber). Anna also deals with her ailing mother who appears to be in the early stages of dementia, while Jack lives with his alcoholic sister and his niece. The sister also has school ties to the victim, who of course wasn't an angel. There is a plethora of characters and subplots which overstuffs the basic murder plot premise.
Bernthal is normally among the most magnetic of actors, and here he tries a bit too hard to give us down-home folksiness and tends to end his sentences with "yeah?" often enough for it to be noticeable. Tessa Thompson was never an actress who did it for me. There is something bland about her which doesn't allow us inside. I would say maybe it's just this character, but I've noticed that about many of her performances.
The whodunit itself contains a twist I saw coming and another I didn't. I suppose I cared just enough to watch for the outcome, but even with six episodes, it takes a long time to get to there. Or it just feels that way.