The third and
final season of “Love, Victor” suddenly takes on a political importance only
implicit when the show debuted in 2020. Even during the short period of its
run, the open existence of LGBTQ teenagers has made them a target for
legislation and hate speech from American conservatives. Stereotypes linking
gayness and pedophilia that seemed to have died out are rapidly returning,
influencing law. In this climate, a show about a teenager who came out as gay
at 16 and dates other boys, even if it’s not much different in style or form
than numerous TV shows about heterosexual youth, is a statement.
“Love, Victor”
was created by Isaac Aptaker and Elizabeth Berger, screenwriters of the 2018
film “Love, Simon.” Without departing much from the aesthetic of “Love, Simon”
(itself based on Becky Albertalli’s novel “Simon vs. the Homo Sapiens Agenda”),
it tries to compensate for some of the film’s blind spots. Where Simon was
white, Victor Salazar (Michael Cimino) is Latinx and one of his friends is
Iranian-American. (However, it’s never delved far into the specifics of gay
Latinx experiences.) The show depicts a community of teenagers that’s
ethnically diverse, including queer girls among its major characters.
At the start
of season three of “Love, Victor,” Victor is dating Benji (George Sears). Benji
still struggles with his drinking problem, and a night where he almost gets
caught drunk driving leads him to rehab. Upon returning, he claims that he
needs to break up with Victor because their relationship is an emotional
trigger. Still devastated, Victor finds the new level of acceptance he’s
achieved at school and with his family a bit hard to handle. His basketball
coach, who can barely say the word “gay,” offers him a “Bravery Award.”
Victor’s parents Armando (James Martinez) and Isabel (Ana Ortiz) reconcile.
Meanwhile, Rahim (Anthony Keyvan) shares Benji’s trip to rehab with the entire
school, jealous over Victor and Benji’s relationship.
Whatever the
GOP thinks, Disney has hardly been a consistent LGBTQ ally, giving us a long
string of queer-coded villains, queerbaiting subtext, and claims that films in
which two men dance together for five seconds are breakthroughs in
representation.
“Love, Victor” was originally slated to premiere on Disney+, but it was moved to Hulu, which they also own. But the show benefited from the move, becoming able to explore the realities of teenagers dating more than “Love, Simon.” The show has never gotten explicit; one character jokes about feeling like a character on “Euphoria” after staying up drinking root beer floats. Its sex scenes fade out quickly, yet they do exist. While nothing much happened during “Love, Simon” to warrant its PG-13 rating, Victor gets stoned at a party and comes down with an STI in this season.
Consisting of
eight episodes averaging slightly less than 30 minutes, this whole season could
be binge-watched in a long evening. But to keep the audience’s attention, most
episodes close with an emotional cliffhanger. “Love, Victor” embraces
melodrama, compressing years worth of life into a fairly short period. The
third season returns to the theme of Benji’s addiction and whether his
turbulent relationship with Victor bears some responsibility for it, as his
father thinks. Most teenagers would be lucky to have all the experiences Victor
goes through in one season during their entire four years of high school. Greg
Berlanti, the director of “Love, Simon,” has been an executive producer on 16
TV shows, and helped create the WB/CW teen drama formula. It persists on “Love,
Victor.”
“Love, Victor”
never hits the heights of the British
series “Heartstopper,” which hit on Netflix earlier this year. It
plays things a little too safe, even returning to the fairground setting where
the emotional climax of “Love, Simon” took place in the final episode. But its
desire for reassurance reflects something real. It finds drama rooted in
teenagers coming out but doesn’t end there: most of these kids’ problems, such
as a relationship that winds up on the rocks because one partner plans to move
away, aren’t tied to their gayness.
“Love, Victor”
and “Heartstopper” represent something new in LGBTQ media, derived from YA
novels and moving away from the arthouse. Queer cinema has long been rooted in
rebellion and a quest to find new forms to express a sexuality that was
forcefully pushed out of the mainstream. These shows stake a claim on it inside
that mainstream, pushing queerness into places where all too many heterosexual
adults have made it invisible, especially the teen films modeled on John
Hughes. While much of their audience consists of teenagers themselves, they can
speak to adults who were never able to date same-gender partners or be open
about their sexuality as high school students.
“Love, Victor”
presents a world that’s becoming more kind, without denying the existence of
homophobia. The fragility of that world in real life lies underneath it.
“Love, Victor” | Starts streaming June 15th on Hulu
SOURCE: GAY CITY NEWS
Totally getting the 3rd season later today & saving myself from any spoilers 'til then! 👏🏻
ReplyDeleteIt's quite somethin' that it's the last season, too... 🙂