“Italy’s just so romantic…you’re gonna die. They’ll have to drag you out of here,” says an outgoing guest at the very start of the second season of The White Lotus, which proved a hit for HBO when it premiered last year. From the instant those words left her mouth, I had the sense that they would be true, in both a literal and metaphorical sense.
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Once again, HBO has pulled in an all-star cast to play a host of mildly despicable characters. Theo James (The Time Traveler’s Wife), Meghann Fahy (The Bold Type), Aubrey Plaza (Parks and Recreation), F. Murray Abraham (Amadeus), Michael Imperioli (The Sopranos), Tom Hollander (Pirates of the Caribbean) and Hayley Lu Richardson (Shake it Up) are among the newcomers, each representing a different archetypal personality to mix and mingle with each other. They’re joined by Jennifer Coolidge and Jon Gries, the only actors reprising their roles from the first season as Tanya McQuoid and Greg Hunt, two White Lotus guests who married after their meeting and affair in the previous season. Their arcs from the show’s debut season didn’t necessarily need a continuation, but it’s always nice to see some familiar faces.
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The creative limitations of only one individual handling both writing and directing duties for a series aside, the script is intelligent as ever, and the direction makes full use of both the location and the performers’ talents. The very premise of the series is based in relationship drama of every sort, and Season Two leans into it big-time. It’s sometimes difficult not to see the season’s new characters as “new versions” of the ones we knew in Season One, but as the episodes progress, we get a better sense of who they are how they’ll fit into the story. It’s still funny, but in an incredibly awkward way — is it making us think about the world around us, or is it only serving to sink us deeper into an unescapable pit of discomfort? I’m still not sure what The White Lotus is trying to do.
Image courtesy of Warner Bros |
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