With all of
the streaming networks creating original content and all of the networks
steadily releasing content, it can be extremely difficult to watch everything.
Even more than that: it can be extremely hard to even hear about everything.
Things often fall through the cracks and then when you find them randomly, you
wonder how, in fact, you missed them in the first place. Such was the case with
Hulu's The Ignorant Angels.
An Italian
series (if you watch it on Hulu under the name Le Fate Ignoranti,
you can view it in Italian with English subtitles,) the show is on its face one
about loss and grieving. Massimo (Luca Argentero,) a handsome married man of 15
years, dies in a motorcycle accident. He leaves behind his wife Antonia
(Cristiana Capotondi), his secret lover and boyfriend Michele (Eduardo
Scarpetta), and the chosen family that Michele built and welcomed him into. The
resulting series is one of loss and grieving, yes, but it's also about family,
sexuality, relationships, and, more importantly, the fluidity of it all.
Make no
mistake: The Ignorant Angels is not necessarily some
revelation in screenwriting. I don't necessarily find it disruptive, historic,
or even boundary-pushing to be frank — maybe it was when the original movie
came out in 2001, but not so much for the series which came out earlier this
year. But, then again good television doesn't have to be. I would venture to
say that most aren't. The Ignorant Angels provides a cast of
imperfect characters living imperfect lives finding their joys where they can.
The result is charming, loveable even, and they provide scenes and small
comments that you could extrapolate into your own life.
When we find
out that Vera (Lilith Primavera) is trans and fled her home, this isn't the
first time we've seen this storyline. It's not the first time a mother could
not accept their trans child for who they are. But still, watching it play out,
to someone we've fallen in love with as she's laughed, consoled, and even
physically defended her family of friends, it's moving. And that's what is
addictive about it.
Over eight
episodes in its first season, we are invited into the home of this family,
sometimes through the eyes of Antonia who finds even herself under the house's
seductive gravitational pull. While watching you will find yourself laughing,
throwing up your hands at the choices being made, and maybe even shedding a
tear or two. In the end, there's a chance you may ask if you're an ignorant
angel too.
SOURCE: OUT DOT COM
No comments:
Post a Comment