The first trailer for Neighbors, which is executive produced by Josh Safdie and A24, has been released.
Neighbors is a forthcoming late-night series created for HBO Max. Coming from executive producers and directors Harrison Fishman and Dylan Redford, the show will premiere on the streaming platform next month.
Check out the Neighbors trailer below (watch more trailers and clips):
What release date is announced in the Neighbors trailer?
As announced in the trailer, Neighbors will premiere on HBO and HBO Max on Friday, February 13, at 9 p.m. ET/PT. New episodes will continue to be released on a weekly basis, with the season having six episodes in total.
The synopsis for the show reads, “A new HBO and A24 late-night series, Neighbors examines stories of absurd, outrageous, and dramatic real-life residential conflicts from a wide range of larger-than-life characters across the United States, opening a verité portal into the lives of contemporary Americans. Each episode introduces a new set of neighbors in the heat of their grievances, uncovering spirited disputes about property lines, animal ownership, and even a yellow Speedo. Directors and emerging talents Harrison Fishman and Dylan Redford filmed for over two years, traveling across the country and fully immersing themselves in these neighbors’ lives to capture an unfiltered and intimate portrait of everyday people and document the fundamentally American pursuits of life, liberty, and property.”
Eli Bush, Ronald Bronstein, and JP Lopez Ali also serve as executive producers on Neighbors.
Fishman and Redford said about the show, via Warner Bros. Discovery, “Our first goal is to make our audience laugh. Second to that, we hope to offer a somewhat unique opportunity to see both sides of a real-life dispute. Not just because it’s funny and dramatic, but because wrestling with two competing yet valid truths hopefully evokes some small sense of empathy. We believe that, in most of these disputes, neither of the neighbors is ‘bad’ or ‘evil.’ They might have done something bad, but that doesn’t make them bad. People tend to hurt each other for a reason, a context that is nearly impossible to access.”