Alice and Steve: when friendship breaks for filial love

Published on June 08, 2026 | Translated from Spanish

Disney+'s new series, Alice and Steve, explores the conflict between a designer and her best friend, a hairdresser. Everything falls apart when he starts dating her daughter. The show reflects real tensions about loyalty, age, and the limits of love in everyday life.

two women and one man in a heated argument inside a modern hair salon, a younger woman with scissors and comb in hand stepping between an older designer holding a tablet and a male hairstylist with a blow dryer, salon chairs and mirrors reflecting tension, hairdressing tools scattered on counter, dramatic shadows from overhead salon lighting, cinematic photorealistic style, emotional confrontation during a styling session, showing fractured friendship through body language, ultra-detailed textures of hair products and salon equipment, realistic skin tones and fabric folds, high contrast lighting

The Emotional Engine: How the Series Builds Its Generational Conflict 🎭

From a narrative standpoint, the series uses visual contrasts between Alice's minimalist design studio and Steve's vintage salon to mark their separate worlds. The scripts dose the tension with awkward silences and sharp dialogues. The direction uses close-ups in arguments, forcing the viewer to feel the claustrophobia of the emotional triangle. There are no special effects or plot twists: the drama is sustained by the performances and a soundtrack that underscores every disagreement.

Practical Advice: Don't Introduce Your Daughter to the Hairdresser ✂️

If Alice and Steve teaches anything, it's that sharing your trusted stylist is already a risk. But sharing your daughter is a direct ticket to an awkward Christmas dinner. The worst part is that he then deliberately messes up your bangs, and you have to pretend you like it. The series is a manual on how not to mix friendship, business, and family.