logo
We were lied to

We were lied to

Express Tribune7 days ago
It is a rare achievement for a book and its corresponding television show to be as spectacularly terrible as each other, but We Were Liars is the unique work of art that pulls it off.
Nobody else will tell you this, by the way. In a bid to eat into hours of your time that you will never get back, E Lockhart's We Were Liars attempts to sell us the story of Cadence Sinclair, her picture-perfect cousins, their tiny private island, their idyllic sun-drenched, sea-soaked summer holidays. There is also a terrible tragedy that Cadence alludes to but gives us no details about.
A huge part of the reason for Cadence's reticence is that she has no memory of any of these terrible things, and no one with a fully functioning memory in her life sees fit to supply answers. Additionally, despite the promising title, nobody actually does any lying here. Everyone is just irritatingly obtuse. Cadence is left to play detective, causing you to come close to throwing either your remote or the book by the time she arrives at her tortuous conclusion. We really need to find a way to cure literary amnesia to spare future readers the pain of a rambling, incoherent protagonist who probably could have been shoved off a cliff at the earliest opportunity.
Unfortunately, not everyone subscribes to these unkind thoughts about fictional amnesiacs like Cadence. Enraptured BookTokkers who were late in picking up this 2014 bestseller, along with giddy IMDb reviewers who fell in love with the Prime Video show of the same name which arrived in June, will conspire to trap you into the well of horror that is both the book and the limited series. Do not be the deluded fool who falls for their solemn (but mendacious) promises of excellence, unless you enjoy the incomplete, imaginatively punctuated sentences spilling forth from an unreliable teenaged narrator who unfurls a twist that makes you heartily wish she had perished on page 1 – of both the book and the script.
A rambling mess
If you are not already overflowing with gratitude for having been thusly warned, you should be, because you have now been spared two days of skimming through tedious descriptions of our heroine's trauma-induced headaches. And do not feel you will be left out of this headache party if you only plan on watching the show! You show watchers will also get to experience your fair share of We Were Liar-induced headaches after suffering through intense close-ups of blinding blonde hair and shiny white teeth. Before you are all up in arms, we must make it clear, we are not discriminating against dental hygiene and bright hair hair; what we are saying is, one should not have to reach for sunglasses upon finding oneself in extreme close quarters with teeth that dazzle like the sun and dominate the screen, certainly not one we are are squinting at these teeth on TV instead of our phones.
Anyway, just what manner of trauma has caused Cadence to be plagued with her aches and pains is not made immediately clear; what is certainly clear is that gets them, and keeps us all in the loop with no thought to spare for commas or, indeed, punctuation of any description – at least not in the traditional sense. Devoid of scaffolding and structure, Cadence's sentences melt into one another with not quite the finesse of sugar pooling into caramel on a hot pan, but more like instant coffee granules spilling onto a wet kitchen floor. You are left with sludge, a mess that you wish you a nearby adult would clean up, until you remember that you are the only adult in the vicinity, and no one else is coming to do any cleaning. In doing so, Cadence has become the Holden Caufield of the 21st century, which is not quite the sterling recommendation lovers of The Catcher in the Rye would like to think it is.
Irritating comrades
Like all her fellow teenage protagonists, Cadence also has a love interest her age who goes by 'Gat'. Gat is the Montague to her Capulet, the Jack to her Rose. We are informed in both the book and show (via Cadence's expository monologue), that Gat is "contemplation and enthusiasm. Ambition and strong coffee." In case we missed it, we are reminded of it repeatedly, although the first time we get this opening description of him is when Cadence and Gat are both eight years old, so quite what she knows about either ambition or strong coffee at that age is a bit of a question mark. Perhaps the strong coffee is a metaphor for Gat's skin colour (owing to his Indian heritage, which of course must be given a food-oriented description if we are to have any hope of picturing what he looks like.) It certainly isn't because Gat is a caffeine addict. We have also yet to deduce what levels of ambition or contemplation Gat radiated at age eight that were picked by young Cadence.
Gat is not the only person who is awarded such trite allegories. On both page and screen, Cadence's cousins and best friends, John and Mirren, come with similar labels. John, apparently, is "bounce, effort, and snark." Mirren, meanwhile, is "sugar, curiosity, and rain." How does one come spring-loaded with effort or sugar? This, like Gat's ambition and coffee, remains tantalisingly unclear, although if at least one easily impressed reviewer is to be believed, all of this is indicative of "beautifully executed, spare, precise, and lyrical prose."
In addition to being snark, sugar, and strong coffee, John, Mirren, and Gat form the bedrock of Cadence's annual island holidays, which, as you may have guessed due to the presence of the mysterious Bad Thing, are not quite as idyllic as either lyrical prose or close-up shots of beautiful sun-kissed hair will lead you to believe. Will Cadence's besties help her find the answers she so desperately and tediously seeks?
If you are the type of reader who prefers that their book or show sticks to the genre that has been promised in the blurb, then I have even more bad news for you, because We Were Liars takes liberties here as well. With a plot that moves with the speed of an elderly sloth with arthritis, we must ask ourselves: are we dealing with a murder mystery? A supernatural thriller? A medical drama? Is any of this real? Are BookTokkers high?
The good news is that we do end up receiving answers for most of these questions. The bad news is that the answers will probably send you into a spiral of rage cleaning as you try to delete them from your mind. (Thoughts and prayers if you embark on this foolish book or show journey during a long-haul flight, when the advantages of rage cleaning are not available to you.) In short, I trust this public service message will have made it abundantly clear that you should definitely recommend We Were Liars — in both show and book format — to a much loathed foe.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Meryl Streep draws crowds in heatwave as fans wait hours to see The Devil Wears Prada 2 set in New York
Meryl Streep draws crowds in heatwave as fans wait hours to see The Devil Wears Prada 2 set in New York

Express Tribune

time9 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

Meryl Streep draws crowds in heatwave as fans wait hours to see The Devil Wears Prada 2 set in New York

Fans congregated along midtown Manhattan, enduring temperatures near 100 °F, in hopes of catching a glimpse of Meryl Streep and her Devil Wears Prada 2 co-stars filming inside a Dior store. The location was secured as the setting for a scene, with windowpanes covered by crumpled brown paper to shield the interior. Approximately 60 people stood in the shade across the street, phones at the ready in expectation of spotting the legendary actress. The filming took place across a busy six-lane section of 57th Street, with taxis and cyclists passing between viewers and the closed storefront. One onlooker, Diana Nassar, paused during her workday at Prime Video to photograph the scene. She had been tracking the production on Instagram and was redirected to the shoot location by a crew member who provided the schedule and water to ease her wait. 'I just want to see something in action,' Nassar said, reflecting the sentiment of many who had gathered. Among them were Alison Stewart and her sister Sarah McManus, British tourists who had planned a U.S. film location tour. They learned the shoot coincided with their New York stop, and arrived by late morning, hoping to witness at least one take before their evening flight. Stewart recounted spotting Streep exiting a car: 'It was exciting.' Meanwhile, New York software engineer Amal Matmati said she braved the heat to admire the cast's fashion and costumes. Paparazzi had already captured images of Anne Hathaway and Emily Blunt in stylish new looks ahead of the film's release. Matmati added, 'It's out of context... it makes me more excited to see the movie.' While Disney's 20th Century has not publicly announced upcoming shoot locations, production notice postings bearing the word 'cerulean' hinted at the film's connection to the original's iconic reference. For many spectators, the real-time fashion tableau on set only deepened anticipation for what the sequel may bring.

New 'Demon Slayer' film topples records
New 'Demon Slayer' film topples records

Express Tribune

time19 hours ago

  • Express Tribune

New 'Demon Slayer' film topples records

The latest film adaptation of hit manga and anime series Demon Slayer is breaking records in Japan, becoming the fastest film to gross 10 billion yen ($67 million), reported AFP. Demon Slayer: Kimetsu No Yaiba — The Movie: Infinity Castle was released on July 18. According to IMDb, the film made 1.64 billion yen ($11.1 million) on opening day, setting a new record for the highest first-day gross in Japanese cinema history. Currently screening in Japan, the offering reached the 10-billion-yen mark after eight days. According to Kogyo Tsushinsha, which tracks film sales, the previous record-holder was the last instalment of the series, Demon Slayer: Mugen Train, which hit that figure after 10 days in 2020. "We thank each and every fan who came to movie theatres and theatre staff who are delivering this to the fans," the film's official X account said on Monday. Forbes reported that The Movie: Infinity Castle will hit international theatres in August, when it will premiere in several Asian countries. In Australia, it will be released on September 11. In the US, the UK, and Canada, it will premiere a day later, on September 12. The previous instalment, The Mugen Train, made $485 million worldwide, $435 million of which was outside the US. Demon Slayer is originally a manga comic book series that has sold over 200 million copies worldwide, according to its publisher Shueisha. The work by artist Koyoharu Gotouge follows a combat adventure of boy hero Tanjiro Kamado who fights demons as he searches for a cure for his sister who has become one. The intense popularity of the series is rivalled only by global titles like Dragon Ball, Naruto, and One Piece, Kyodo News said. The original manga series appeared in the popular Weekly Shonen Jump magazine from 2016 to 2020.

Murphy, Davidson deliver laughs together
Murphy, Davidson deliver laughs together

Express Tribune

time2 days ago

  • Express Tribune

Murphy, Davidson deliver laughs together

Actor-comedians Eddie Murphy and Pete Davidson team up for The Pickup, a heist film that sees them sparring as a pair of incompatible armoured truck drivers, reports Reuters. Starring opposite Murphy, 64, was "a bucket list thing" for Davidson, 31, who had admired Murphy's work since he was seven. Unlike their characters, the two had much in common. "Pete comes from SNL. He's a standup comic. We're both from the East Coast," said Murphy. "I love to get into a scene with somebody else that's funny, improvise with them and start playing, I love it." On a routine round of cash pickups, Murphy's Russell and Davidson's Travis get targeted by criminals. Things get personal when Travis discovers that the thieves are led by his one-night-stand from the night before, played by Keke Palmer, and the life of Russell's hot-headed wife, played by Eva Longoria, comes under threat. The duo must pull together to save the day. The script, by Kevin Burrows and Matt Mider, served as their blueprint and director Tim Story encouraged them to go off it, the two said. "We would do one as written and then Tim and everyone was like, 'Just go nuts' and we would end up just trying to one-up each other, we were just trying to make each other laugh," said Davidson. "They were improvising constantly and it was really sweet to see. It's so cool because you see two different generations," added Palmer. The generational differences also seeped into the scenes, with the fighting taking its toll on Russell's body. "Usually in these types of movies or my early movies like the 'Beverly Hills Cop' and 48 Hrs., I was the young maverick and now I'm the older guy," said Murphy. The Pickup starts streaming on Prime Video on August 6. As per Variety, Murphy's next big screen project is reprising his role as Donkey in Shrek 5. He's also signed on for a Donkey spin-off, which he'll start filming in September, according to Screenrant.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store