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Yvonne VillarrealĮverything you need to know about the film or TV series everyone’s talking about If only it were that easy IRL! Still, it’s an interesting, albeit brief, take on the romantic drama. with the conceit being that Lina is trying to wean herself off thinking about Nico, whom she was with for nine years, by thinking about him a minute less each day. Each episode toggles between the past and present at different lengths - one minute in present time and 10 minutes in the past - two minutes in present time and nine minutes in the past, etc. The Spanish series (don’t worry, subtitles are your friend) makes use of a unique format: It consists of 10 episodes of 11 minutes each and tells a story of love and heartbreak between Lina (Nadia de Santiago) and Nico (Álvaro Cervantes Sorribas). If you have only 11 minutes to spare for your TV viewing - I’m looking at you, parents and workaholics! - consider escaping into the world of Netflix’s “El Tiempo Que Te Doy” (The Time I Give You). Led by a superb cast of young actors, including D’Pharaoh Woon-A-Tai, Devery Jacobs, Paulina Alexis and Lane Factor, it juggles Indigenous spirits, driver’s tests, racism, hunting, meth heads, country music and suicide without breaking a sweat, and emerges as perhaps the only series currently on TV to thoroughly capture the one great truth I learned teaching high school: No one is as real, or surreal, as teenagers. “Reservation Dogs” is also, like fellow FX comedy standouts “ Atlanta,” “ Better Things” and “ What We Do in the Shadows,” a seemingly infinite reservoir of unabashed invention, with episodes that feel like road movies, horror films, family dramas and farces. Created by Sterlin Harjo and Taika Waititi, written and directed entirely by Indigenous talent, the series is not simply an enthrallingly artful journey into Oklahoma’s Muscogee (Creek) Nation - though for the uninitiated, myself included, it brims with illuminating, often wryly funny depictions of the meager job opportunities, cramped housing and faltering healthcare system available to Indigenous people in America and the world over. I’ve had “Reservation Dogs” (FX on Hulu) on my to-do list since it premiered in August, after Times TV critic Robert Lloyd called it a “radical” teen show with “life in every frame.” Having finally made time for it this week (sorry!), I can endorse his rave wholeheartedly.