HBO plays normally, taking on the style of Mare of Easttown, burying a suspense bomb in a big issue. However, this proportion of suspense is almost negligible (it is also a suspense drama that criticized the skin at the beginning of Hua Deng, you taught me how to write a script from a scholar? Netflix!)
It's all shot, white men, white women, rich people who think they're cynical, naive men who don't grow up in college, naive men, colonialists, racists, sexists, and sarcastic people who are overly politically correct, but almost all of them are just scratching the surface. , not the strength of the script, but the fact that these are only found in the real world at most. The appearance of the former president of Amelika is the best footnote, so as a realistic style satirical script is still in place, but the suspense is only I'm a little disappointed with the 0.01% ratio. Finally, leaving hope to a 14-year-old white boy, rowing the sea, escaping from a middle-class white family, elite education and electronic products with the aborigines - perhaps expressing an attitude of "fighting and maintaining acceptance and expectation". But everyone else's ending has a sadness that wants to make people yell fuck.
When I watched it, I wanted to sigh countless times about come on middle-class white families. Your fancy stuff is the most boring way of life I can think of. This fucking is the life of people who take up all the privileges, ah, this fucking human society, still Without criticizing, I already just want to hang or disco.
The biggest takeaway was actually making me rethink colonialism in a more radical way. "If you feel that what you have now is not stolen." Destruction of culture, occupation of means of production such as land, exploitation, and then viewing (consumption) with the power to shape stereotyped misunderstandings, only humans can To do such a vicious thing (suddenly Marx.
Don't forget your privileges.
From Big little lies to Mare of Easttown to The white lotus, HBO has really captured the soul of this genre.
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