Catherine Ravenscroft, a famed documentary journalist, discovers she is a prominent character in a novel that purports to reveal a secret she has tried to keep hidden.
Style
The story is revealed in a non-linear fashion with scenes alternating between a holiday in Italy (young Catherine’s encounter with Jonathan and his subsequent death by drowning) and back home in London twenty years later (the truth emerges, the consequences). The series also uses the technique of unreliable narrator in that the events in Italy are told twice: first from Nancy's speculative point of view and later from Catherine's first person experience.
Cast
Main
Cate Blanchett and Leila George as Catherine Ravenscroft, an award-winning journalist and documentarian.[1][2][3] Blanchett portrays an older Catherine, while George portrays the character during a holiday in Italy twenty years prior.
Kevin Kline as Stephen Brigstocke, a retired private school teacher who harbors a grudge against Catherine.[4]
Sacha Baron Cohen as Robert Ravenscroft, Catherine's husband who runs a corrupt non-profit company.[5]
Celebrated documentarian Catherine Ravenscroft receives a package containing a book titled The Perfect Stranger. Horrified by its contents, Catherine sets the book on fire before finishing it, telling her husband Robert that she believes the story to be about her. Flashbacks show that the book was sent to Catherine by Stephen Brigstocke, a retired teacher grieving the deaths of his wife Nancy and son Jonathan. Stephen finds a manuscript of the book in Nancy's belongings, alongside a collection of photos taken by Jonathan during his trip to Italy 15 years before, which includes erotic photos of a young Catherine. Stephen publishes the book and sends it to Catherine as revenge for Jonathan's death, for which he holds her responsible. Another series of flashbacks to 2001 shows Jonathan arriving in Italy with his girlfriend Sasha, who abruptly leaves when she learns her aunt has died in a car crash. Now alone, Jonathan visits a beach where he first sees and surreptitiously photographs Catherine.
2
"II"
Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón
October 11, 2024 (2024-10-11)
Stephen is shown to have visited Catherine's estranged, wayward son, Nicholas, at the department store where he works, to discreetly deliver him a copy of The Perfect Stranger. Another flashback shows Catherine visiting Nancy, who is dying of cancer and berates Catherine for her role in Jonathan's death. She demands to meet Nicholas, telling Catherine that he would not be alive if not for Jonathan; Catherine refuses and leaves in a panic. In the present, Stephen delivers a copy of the book to Robert's office via his secretary, also including copies of Jonathan's photos. A disgusted Robert recognizes the photos from his and Catherine's vacation in Italy 15 years ago. Robert confronts Catherine with the photos, believing her to have had an affair after he was called away from the trip for work. A tearful Catherine says that the man who took the photos died. Before she can explain further, Robert angrily storms out of the house with the book and drives away.
3
"III"
Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón
October 18, 2024 (2024-10-18)
Robert spends the night drinking and sleeping in his car. The next day, he ignores Catherine's calls and skips work to read The Perfect Stranger. Catherine leaves a voicemail for Stephen sympathizing with his grief but asserting that the book is a fiction. Stephen learns that the book has gained popularity since its publication. In 2001, Jonathan befriends Catherine by helping her bring a young Nicholas and her belongings back to her hotel. Catherine invites Jonathan for a drink in the hotel restaurant and aggressively flirts with him. She brings him to her room and guides him through how to pleasure her, culminating in passionate sex. Days later, the police inform a devastated Stephen and Nancy that Jonathan died of an accidental drowning at the beach. The couple travels to Italy to identify their son's body, and Nancy secretly collects the film stock in Jonathan's camera.
4
"IV"
Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón
October 18, 2024 (2024-10-18)
Catherine is horrified to discover The Perfect Stranger in her local bookstore while Robert later kicks her out of the house. In flashbacks to the years after Jonathan's death, a grieving Nancy moves into Jonathan's room and secretly begins writing The Perfect Stranger while dying of cancer. In 2001, Jonathan has Catherine pose for his photos during their tryst, and the two have sex again the next day in a beach cabana. Jonathan tells Catherine he is in love with her and has already bought a ticket to London to be with her, but Catherine tells him they cannot be together. Nicholas, left unattended, takes his inflatable dinghy into the water, and the current takes him far into the sea. Jonathan rushes in to save him, followed by a number of lifeguards and beachgoers. Nicholas is successfully rescued, but Catherine sees Jonathan drowning in the distance and neglects to alert anyone; by the time the lifeguards take notice and bring him ashore, Jonathan has already died.
5
"V"
Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón
October 25, 2024 (2024-10-25)
Catherine goes to stay with her mother Helen, who suffers from dementia, and tells her the full truth of her past while she sleeps. Stephen visits Catherine's office with copies of The Perfect Stranger and tells Jisoo, Catherine's assistant, that the book recounts Catherine's choice to leave her lover to die. By the time Catherine arrives at work, all of her co-workers have read the book and shun her; she storms out and slaps her colleague, Simon, for touching her arm, which is caught on video and goes viral. Catherine knocks on Stephen's door demanding to talk to him, but he does not answer. Stephen and Robert later meet for dinner, where Robert thanks Stephen for the book. With the help of his publisher, Stephen creates a fake Instagram page for Jonathan and uses it to message Nicholas; he eventually reveals that Jonathan is dead and that Nicholas is the boy he died saving, before sending Jonathan's photos of Catherine to Nicholas as a cross-reference with the book. A horrified Nicholas visits a drug den he frequents, and overdoses on heroin.
6
"VI"
Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón
November 1, 2024 (2024-11-01)
Separate flashbacks reveal inaccuracies in Nancy's retelling of the events in Italy: Sasha is revealed to have left the trip after a fight with Jonathan, not because of her aunt, and Catherine recounts that she simply noticed Jonathan watching her throughout her first day alone with Nicholas, and did not actually engage with him. In the present, Nicholas is hospitalized following his overdose. Robert informs Stephen and allows him to visit the comatose Nicholas. Stephen arrives with a syringe full of cleaning chemicals, intending to kill Nicholas, only for Catherine to intervene. Following a tense fight, Robert privately apologizes to Stephen for Catherine's behavior and tells him he can visit again. That night, Catherine breaks into Stephen's house, and sits him down to hear the truth of what really happened in Italy.
7
"VII"
Alfonso Cuarón
Alfonso Cuarón
November 8, 2024 (2024-11-08)
Catherine reveals to Stephen that Jonathan broke into her hotel room, held her at knifepoint, forced her to pose for his photos, then repeatedly raped her before leaving. The next day, Jonathan did indeed drown saving Nicholas; Catherine had collected physical evidence of her rape, but got rid of it after Jonathan died, wanting her memory of the experience to die with him. As Catherine finishes her story, she realizes that Stephen has drugged her tea and collapses; Stephen then returns to the hospital to kill Nicholas, but relents when he awakens and calls for his mother. Stephen, finally accepting what Catherine told him, informs Robert, who is overcome with guilt. Catherine awakens and rushes to the hospital where she reunites with her family. In the aftermath, Stephen reclaims and burns all the copies of The Perfect Stranger, along with Jonathan's photos and Nancy's belongings. He discovers that one of the photos shows young Nicholas witnessing his mother's rape and contemplates suicide. Unable to forgive Robert for what she’s been through, Catherine chooses to divorce him, and later reconciles with Nicholas.
On review aggregator Rotten Tomatoes, the series has an approval rating of 76% with an average rating of 7.4/10, based on 99 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "An intelligent offering from a dream team of talent that also dishes some plain pulpy pleasures, Disclaimer is a dense and rewarding psychological puzzle."[20]Metacritic calculated a weighted average of 70 out of 100 based on 32 critics, indicating "generally favorable" reviews.[21]