Too Much is a romantic comedy limited series created by Lena Dunham and Luis Felber, starring Megan Stalter and Will Sharpe. It was released on Netflix on July 10, 2025. In November 2025, Netflix announced that the show would not be renewed for a second season.
After a traumatic break-up, thirty-something New York City commercial producer Jessica accepts a work transfer to London.
Jessica, a fan of British period films and romances, is taken aback by her council flat accommodation and loneliness. After forcing herself to visit a pub alone, Jessica witnesses musician Felix performing. Felix and she eventually connect and he returns home with her; a romance slowly blooms between the two. Felix and Jessica must bridge cross-cultural relationship divides, their respective relationship histories, and own family dynamics in order to hopefully sustain a healthy relationship.
Wife and husband team Lena Dunham and Luis Felber executive produced the ten-episodes series with Dunham directing and Felber providing original music. The executive producers also include Tim Bevan, Eric Fellner, Michael P. Cohen, Surian Fletcher-Jones and Bruce Eric Kaplan, with Camilla Bray as producer. The series is produced by Working Title Television as well as Dunham's Good Thing Going banner.
Megan Stalter and Will Sharpe were confirmed in the lead roles in December 2023. In February 2024, Emily Ratajkowski was reportedly in talks for a role. A more complete cast list was announced the following month.
Filming took place in Beaconsfield, Buckinghamshire, in February 2024. Filming took place in Brooklyn, New York City, in June 2024. Filming also took place in London in 2024.
All episodes of Too Much premiered on Netflix on July 10, 2025.
The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported an 79% approval rating based on 82 critic reviews. The website's critics consensus reads, "A winning showcase for Megan Stalter, Too Muchs approach to modern love is coolly detached but creator Lena Dunham's sharp sense of humor remains just right." Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 68 out of 100 based on 33 critics, indicating "generally favorable".
Reviewing the series for USA Today, Kelly Lawler gave a rating of 3/4 and described it as "very funny and sweet, but also at times distinctly melancholy, and it navigates its different moods gracefully." Ben Travers of IndieWire gave a B and said, "Dunham's latest pulls off a tricky balancing act: giving audiences what we expect from a TV rom-com, as well as what we don't always get. Inkoo Kang of The New Yorker commented, "With its quicksilver shifts and sneaking sweetness, the experience of watching feels a lot like falling in love." Robert Lloyd of Los Angeles Times wrote, "The endgame, when we get to it, could not be any more conventionalâÂÂwhich, I imagine, is the idea."
In the United Kingdom, Lucy Mangan of The Guardian was more critical, writing that the show "abandons any thoughts of innovation and hits cliche after cliche... the irreducible fact remains that Too Much would not be enough from anyone. From Dunham, it is way, way too little."