Nicole Kidman, before telling Meryl Streep that she can’t handle the truth in the Big Little Lies finale. Photo: HBO The first season of Big Little Lies was more than what it initially appeared to be. What started out as a prestige soap opera, complete with a murder mystery and top-shelf actresses making catty comments, revealed itself over seven episodes to be an absorbing window into coping with domestic violence and the ways in which motherhood stifles female identity.
Starting with episode four — a.k.a. “The One Where Nicole Kidman Slaps Meryl Streep” — Big Little Lies season two started to take a wrong turn. In that episode, Mary Louise announces her intention to seek custody of Max and Josh, the twin sons of Perry and Celeste , Perry’s widow.
In a custody case like this, it’s hard to imagine a judge allowing one custody seeker to represent herself and confront the other in this way. It’s even harder to imagine the judge allowing this sort of surprise video evidence to be trotted out with no warning.
This is a frustrating culmination of the show’s tendency to prod and poke at ideas that it never fully engaged with, like, as one example, Bonnie’s race. Bonnie’s mom made a point of noting that Bonnie was the only black person she had seen in Monterey, and while the show never outright states that part of the reason Bonnie may not want to confess is she may not be treated with the same leniency the authorities might afford to a white woman, that is a reasonable thing to assume.
chaneyj Stop trashing Big Little Lies season 2 repeatedly, . Season 2 had one of best TV series casts EVER & was a big success. Let’s agree to disagree. And thank god the audience can still decide for itself what it wants 2 watch and what it likes. enoughalready
United States Latest News, United States Headlines
Similar News:You can also read news stories similar to this one that we have collected from other news sources.
Source: ELLE Magazine (US) - 🏆 472. / 51 Read more »
Source: ELLE Magazine (US) - 🏆 472. / 51 Read more »
Source: wmag - 🏆 723. / 51 Read more »
Source: ELLE Magazine (US) - 🏆 472. / 51 Read more »
Source: NYMag - 🏆 111. / 63 Read more »
Source: VanityFair - 🏆 391. / 55 Read more »