When Danny and Amy arrive at their respective homes after their encounter, neither can get out the full story about what happened. Yet the most gratifying reveals in the ten-part Netflix series aren’t the wild escalations of the central pair but their rich psychological shadings. His choice of target proves unfortunate Amy is even more desperate for a sense of control, and thus for revenge. After the pursuit leaves him unsatisfied, he decides to slowly insinuate himself into her home, even her family, to wreak chaos. Danny is in a foul enough mood that he gives chase to the other driver, Amy Lau (Ali Wong). Danny Cho (Steven Yeun), a handyman in Los Angeles, attempts to pull his beater pickup truck out of a hardware-store parking lot, when he’s met by an obnoxiously long honk from a gleaming white Mercedes S.U.V., then a middle finger thrust out the window. As far as road rage goes, the outburst that sets off the rivalry in the wickedly loopy comic drama “Beef” is downright piddling.
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