(translated from Chinese to English with the help of Gemini)
Disillusionment in Paradise: Random Musings on The White Lotus Season 1 (Spoiler Alert)
I recently binged the first season of The White Lotus. It left me with a bit of a complicated mix of emotions. Here is a summary of my thoughts:
1. Who’s in the Casket?
From the moment she steps off the boat, Rachel (played by Alexandra Daddario) clings to her husband like a koala. When the camera gave her that first extreme close-up—teeth bared in an over-the-top expression of "happiness"—it felt like a sudden flashback to her performance style in Why Women Kill. Fortunately, as the plot slowly unfurls, that forced "blissful bride" facade fades, her facial muscles relax, and she delivers a genuinely convincing performance of a woman drowning in the anxiety of upward social mobility.
As her distress grew, I became increasingly convinced that the person in the casket at the airport wouldn't be her—despite the heavy hints in the opening scene. After all, years of TV experience have taught me that even characters you "witness" taking their last breath can be resurrected later, let alone an unopened casket. I imagined Rachel, terrified by her freak of a husband, had simply vanished to some corner of the world, which would explain her absence from his side in the first scene. Having finished season 1, I realize I might have overestimated her awakening—or perhaps, I underestimated the sheer inertia of life.
2. The Hairy Absurdity
The most jaw-dropping moment of the entire series was undoubtedly Mr. Mossbacher’s cancer scare. There he was, face etched with anxiety, showing his wife his "hairy situation" under his robe. To my surprise, Mrs. Mossbacher leaned in with total solemnity to inspect it. Had this been handled indirectly, it might have been fine, but the director showed no mercy—giving us a steady, glaring close-up of that hairy anatomy.
Curious about the authenticity of the scene, I did some digging. Steve Zahn, who plays Mr. Mossbacher, told The Hollywood Reporter, "I didn't even have to do that part. It’s somebody else wearing a prosthetic. That’s absurd as it gets, right?" Indeed, it is absurd. If it’s a prosthetic, why hire a stunt double to wear it? Is there "hairy" human flesh beneath the "hairy" prosthetic? The filming process sounds more "artistic" than the final product. We often say actors sacrifice for their art; these days, it seems only the stunt doubles truly make that sacrifice.
3. Paula’s Selfishness and Kai’s Tragedy
The most disappointing turning point for me was Paula. She goads Kai into stealing the bracelets, using a grand narrative of "colonial plunder" to effortlessly ruin a simple young man’s life. To me, this felt less like social justice and more like Paula using Kai as a proxy to vent the resentment she’d accumulated while staying with that white family.
When the Mossbachers changed their plans and returned early, Paula had every opportunity to feign illness and leave the boat to warn him. Instead, she remained eerily calm—numb, even. She didn’t even try to text Kai to tell him the plan had changed. She is either incredibly selfish or just plain dim. I had hoped Kai would display a certain innocence—perhaps only taking Paula’s necklace as a memento of love—but instead, he not only took the jewels but also slammed Mrs. Mossbacher to the ground and gave Mr. Mossbacher a brutal beating.
To make matters more "soap-opera-esque," Mr. Mossbacher’s "heroic" intervention miraculously mended his marriage. The high-powered tech CEO, Mrs. Mossbacher, who spent her vacation obsessing over the Chinese market, turned into a cooing schoolgirl the moment she saw her husband’s "bravery," gazing at him adoringly even in front of their kids. This transformation felt incredibly superficial, even greasy. Is the director mocking the way the middle class relies on "shocks" to maintain intimacy? Or does he simply lack an understanding of how a middle-aged spark is actually reignited?
4. Armond’s Spiral and the "Fragrant" Scene
The downfall of the manager, Armond, is the most profound tragedy of the show. From restraint to total collapse, he uses drugs, casual sex, and that "gift" left in Shane’s suitcase to complete his visceral protest against the privileged class: the arched back, the strained face, and the waste landing on high-end pajamas.
In an interview, actor Murray Bartlett said: "We did a lot of coverage of that scene — there were shots of my face and shots of me squatting over the suitcase. We also did wide shots, but Mike [White, the director] was like, ‘Don’t worry, we’re never going to use the wide shots.’ He called me the day that the last episode went to air and was like, ‘You’ve seen it, right? I feel so bad.’ A lot of it is one long wide shot of me squatting over a suitcase doing my thing, which is the perfect shot to use, obviously, but Mike was sort of stressed about it."
I’d like to say to Mike: You should be stressed about it. The audience’s imagination is more than capable of completing that sticky, disgusting sensory experience. We really didn’t need to see exactly what Armond’s backside was doing from a wide angle.
5. The Inescapable Siege and the Lone Bright Spot
The most heartbreaking part is Rachel. Despite having countless opportunities to leave, she chooses to stay and "mother" Shane. When the signs of emotional manipulation are already so clear, must she wait for it to escalate to physical abuse before she regrets it? Running away while Shane was still reeling from the trauma of the killing would have been the ultimate exit strategy; instead, she chose to return to the greenhouse.
Just when I thought the show would end on a note of stagnant "happily ever after" for the elite, the youngest son, Quinn Mossbacher, provided the only solace. He didn't board the plane. Instead, he turned back toward the ocean and his rowing team. It was the most heartening scene in the series. Dramatists can indulge in as much cynicism and irony as they like, but occasionally, we audience really do need a "successful escape" to provide a little comfort for the soul.
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