Sex Education

(series)
  • UK Sex Education (more)
Trailer
UK, (2019–2023), 29 h 20 min (Length: 47–85 min)

Creators:

Laurie Nunn

Composer:

Oli Julian

Cast:

Asa Butterfield, Emma Mackey, Gillian Anderson, Ncuti Gatwa, Kedar Williams-Stirling, Aimee Lou Wood, Connor Swindells, Patricia Allison, Tanya Reynolds (more)
(more professions)

VOD (1)

Seasons(4) / Episodes(32)

Plots(1)

Meet Otis Milburn (Asa Butterfield) – an inexperienced, socially awkward high school student who lives with his mother, a sex therapist. Surrounded by manuals, videos and tediously open conversations about sex, Otis is a reluctant expert on the subject. When his home life is revealed at school, Otis realizes that he can use his specialist knowledge to gain status. He teams up with Maeve, a whip-smart bad-girl, and together they set up an underground sex therapy clinic to deal with their fellow students’ weird and wonderful problems. Through his analysis of teenage sexuality, Otis realises he may need some therapy of his own. (Netflix)

(more)

Reviews of this series by the user TheEvilTwin (1)

Season 4 (2023) (S04) 

English The fourth season slips into the waters of mediocrity and kind of gets caught up in today's trendy times, and in trying to please all of today's weirdos, it kind of forgets to be normal and be the kind of show we loved the first season for, pleasantly and casually entertaining and from the lives of ordinary people. Because in the new season, there's a downright glut of all the LQBTQRSTUV communities, homosexuals, rainbow people and weirdheads, and all the "normals" kind of go by the wayside. Likewise, when the show doesn't know where to go next, it reaches for the easiest thing it can think of, which is to do another relationship and throw in a love scene. This pretty much loses any interesting plot developments, original and surprising relationships or simply the desire to finish the series with gusto and I rather just forced myself into the next episodes without much enjoyment. The comedic elements have dwindled anyway and it's just a rehashing of old things and a wringing of attention on Netflix. Maybe it's time to call it quits...? ()