It is a series of consecutive events about the dramatic story of a young woman called Sally. That woman lived a very good life with David. Both were in a close relationship, but events may change when David asks her to marry. Sally's view changed and Sally may have had a crisis inside her the night he was asked to marry. After that, Sally's relationship began with Emma, an attractive actress and poet.
So far, Sally4Ever is a new creative bar for Davis, and a perfectly uncompromising introduction to her gleefully inappropriate comic auteurism for North American audiences.
Even the most hardened fan will have found this bleak comedy frustratingly familiar; the characters, situations and joke set-ups punctuated the first, unevenly paced episode like a game of Davis bingo.
Davis has...fashioned another wholly sadistic half hour that leaves the viewer skewered and writhing in exquisite agony, the actual jokes and laughter highlighting the pain at the same time as they afford you just enough relief to carry on.
I love everything about Sally4Ever, assuming it's possible to love something that at its most excruciating can only be watched through the gaps between your fingers.