Gilmore Girls Revival Depicts The Conventional Setting Of Life

By Mary Lourd - 19 Dec '16 04:50AM

Gilmore Girls Revival was the best thing that happened in 2016. This Christmas, Gilmore Girls have revealed that TV series filming has been completed for months. Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life was the four-part revival which premiered on Netflix on November 25, 2016.

The TV series highlighted the great mother-and-daughter relationship of Emily and Lorelai, and Lorelai and Rory. Gilmore Girls' cast is by far the best cast in Hollywood. The Netflix and Warner Bros. officially confirmed the revival was titled Gilmore Girls: A Year in the Life. It ran on the life of a single mother Lorelai Gilmore (Lauren Graham) and her daughter, Rory (Alexis Bledel).

On January 26, Yanic Truesdale and David Sutcliffe confirmed his return. On February 1, Tanc Sade played as Finn, Aris Alvarado as Caesar, and Mike Gandolfi returned as Andrew in the series revival. Rose Abdoo, Liza Weil, Matt Czuchry, Milo Ventimiglia, and Jared Padalecki returned as well. The filming of the new episodes started in Los Angeles on February 2. The TV Series was written and directed by Amy Sherman-Palladino and Daniel Palladino.

Gilmore Girls was the intermittent show that portrayed single motherhood. It gave the moral lesson about teenage single motherhood, friendship, and family. The plot started when Lorelai became pregnant with Rory at age of sixteen but decided not to marry Christopher Hayden, Rory's father. The many conflicts within the series were focused on a real life situation. The mother-and-daughter relationships of Emily and Lorelai and Lorelai and Rory became a crucial theme of the series.

The TV series showed the positive and fun light attitude of Lorelai while raising her daughter without help. The parenting struggles, teen heartbreak and resisting the interference of with parents were actually real in the society. The show depicted the conventional setting of life.

This comedy-drama series explores issues of family, friendship, romance, generational-dividing issues and social class. The complete TV series became available worldwide on Netflix.

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