"White Lotus" on HBO Max
This was a surprisingly engaging series despite the slow pacing and unlikable characters. I started watching and would pause to watch something else when the cringe-worthiness of the scenes and the self-involvement of the characters became too much to stomach. But I always returned as I wondered how these people would end up.
The story concerns three parties and their stay at an expensive Hawaiian resort: a husband and wife, both with high paying jobs, their asocial son and prickly daughter, and her tag-along friend; a young couple on their honeymoon--the wife a struggling journalist, the husband, a wealthy, entitled jerk; a wealthy basket case who has brought her recently deceased mother's ashes for release to the ocean. Among the hotel staff, there's a manager in recovery, a spa manager with ambitions to start her own business, and a native Hawaiian whose family once owned the land on which the resort was built. The interplay between them all has mostly disastrous but, at least in one case, unexpectedly positive results.
The limited series could easily have replaced "Lotus" with "Privilege" in the title as we see how wealth and privilege can have sometimes subtle yet toxic effects on even the happiness of the well-to-do, though the effects, of course, are far worse on their subservient victims. Worth watching, I think, for the glimpse it gives into the messiness of privileged lives, which most of us are living to some extent, and often obliviously so.
LonePirate
(13,882 posts)The first episode straddled the fence between comedy and drama which made it a little difficult to obtain much insight into the show's 10 or so largely unlikeable characters and their story arcs. Things picked up in the second episode and kept charging along until the end. While I didn't personally enjoy the final 15 minutes of the last episode, the acting, writing and music in the show were top notch.
I'm still dismayed by Rachel's ending not to mention the parenting choices of the Mossbachers. Then there's Armond. I'm not sure if there was a better alternative for his character but I hated how Shane essentially triumphed over him. Jennifer Coolidge's Tanya was a standout but every character had at least one moment to shine.
There are only six episodes so it's not a huge time commitment. Just be prepared for some slow pacing, characters you may detest and some scenes you probably have never seen on television.
JohnSJ
(96,436 posts)it was examples of what privilege. The so was the only one who escaped, everyone else settled comfortably back into their callous mediocrity
Acting was excellent though
producers could have pushed the story to the point of near absurdity.
Still a fun romp.
mainer
(12,162 posts)Uninspired writing, so-so-acting. Like a reboot of "Fantasy Island" but with murder. Should I keep watching?
nuxvomica
(12,855 posts)It also frames each scene with waves crashing against the beach, but is more low key and I think more thoughtful about the manipulative relationships between the privileged and the underprivileged. I should warn you there's a pretty shocking scene in the last episode that will have you asking "Did they really need to show that on-screen?"
intrepidity
(7,877 posts)(raises hand)
Oops, shoulda said "spoiler alert"
But, spoiler alert ahead:
I really expected and hoped the last episode scene between Shane and Armond would have had the reverse outcome, which would have also happily resolved the unhappy wife's dilemma.
Also, you mean to tell me, they not only boarded but let the plane take off without knowing their minor son was not aboard? Right.