‘White Lotus’: the rich and sex politics

posts explaining The great success of The White Lotus (HBO Max) In the summer of 2021, two major theories appear. In the midst of the soulless growth of economic inequalities, many viewers find themselves class struggles they told on the screen and gladdened certain punishments for the rich. On the other hand, it was still easier: given the many travel restrictions, moving off the couch to a hawaiian resort might be a good edit from the series; like living the holidays through others.

Question How many of us would like to identify with guests? from that first season. That is, people who are unaware of their privileges, or worse yet, are aware of it and can use it to abuse those supposedly below them, like that beleaguered manager played by Murray Bartlett. Above and below, humanity is the order of the day: no one is too obnoxious or too cute.

That’s the trick, or better yet, the talent of director and screenwriter Mike White, creator of HBO’s well-deserved ‘Enlightened’ movie. Just when you think you’re watching the most acidic satire, that screenplay turn, or that sad look that reminds us that no one is what they seem, pops up. When you think you’re looking at the masterpiece of a total disliker, White’s first and foremost a humanist.

now in Sicily

If something is not broken, it is better not to fix it. Or in other words: if it gets an array popular and critical acclaim and if it gets twenty Emmy nominations, it will have to be done again. It doesn’t matter if it wins an Emmy for best miniseries out of nine. Nothing really ends anymore. You just have to take a bunch of wealthy Americans to a very expensive hotel in an exotic (for them) corner and let them behave badly.

In the second season of HBO Max, we went with them to the White Lotus in Sicily.It was built in a former monastery overlooking the Ionian Sea and Mount Etna. Description for travelers with potential: San Domenico Palace in Taormina. There, wealthy Cameron (Theo James) and Daphne (Meghann Fahy) invite their wealthy new friends Ethan (Will Sharpe) and Harper (Aubrey Plaza) for a few days when they’re not working in principle. A three-generation Italian-American family also moves there, with grandfather Bert (F. Murray Abraham), son Dominic (Michael Imperioli) and grandson Albie (Adam DiMarco) searching for his family roots, but Dominic will find time to put it out. Other interests, a little push.

Albie, on the other hand, hits up with Portia (Haley Lu Richardson), an assistant to a character from the first season, perhaps not as much as she’d like: the volatile and vulnerable heiress Tanya McQuoid. (Jennifer Coolidge), with your literal and figurative excess baggage. Her distance from her current husband Greg (Jon Gries) may add to her emotional backpacking. “Sometimes you know someone doesn’t love you the way you want, but you stay there,” Coolidge tells us on a video call. “And the one who loves the least of the two wins the game of love. The one who loves sincerely loses. The other remains superficial calm.”

sex politics

There are still some themes from the first episode (abuse of privilege, midlife crisis), but class struggle we are jumping into a new main motif. “This season focuses on sex politics,” explains actress Aubrey Plaza, who excels as a lawyer struggling to communicate with her enterprising husband. “We talk about jealousy, infidelity. It’s about couples comparing themselves to other couples. About how couples deal with sex and love. We’re always learning about the good guys and the bad guys and opposite sides equally, where White places us.”

It would be easy to support the learned Harper and hate Daphne or Ethan for not watching the news, but then we can see a sadness in Daphne’s eyes, the same sadness that others see in their eyes. “The message of the array, if any, is this: life is crazy and no one is right or wrong‘ says Kare.

At the ‘adventure’ hotel

Mike White mentioned aldovarAntonioni and Fellini among inspirations for new episodes. The latter is available, for example, through locations; The hotel where the season was filmed is the same hotel where Monica Vitti ended up in the final episode of ‘The Adventure’. “We’ve talked a lot about Antonioni – ‘The Sopranos’ indelible Christopher Moltisanti remembers Michael Imperioli – not so much about Almodóvar, but from here he’s my favorite director and if I chose he could pick from anywhere in the world so he’d be the employee. I hope one day it will.”

“She talked to me a lot about Anna Magnani,” says Sabrina Impacciatore, dazzling as the manager who is fed up with everything and lacks great social skills. “He told me I had the same Italian energy. And encouraged me to let out all my angeras much blood as I can get.” If you think Armond is irreplaceable, wait until you meet Valentina.

Source: Informacion

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