Home » The White Lotus Season 3 review: Juicy drama, great performances, still underwhelming

The White Lotus Season 3 review: Juicy drama, great performances, still underwhelming

The White Lotus Season 3 review: Juicy drama, great performances, still underwhelming

[[{“value”:”Jason Isaacs, Parker Posey, Patrick Schwarzenegger, Sarah Catherine Hook, and Sam Nivola in

After two seasons examining the interplay of class, privilege, sex, and fidelity, Mike White’s The White Lotus turns its gaze on wellness and spirituality in its Thailand-set third season.

That’s because the White Lotus hotel we venture to this season isn’t just a luxury resort — it’s also a world-renowned spa and wellness retreat. Massages, guided meditations, and personalized health plans are all a part of the package, offering guests the promise of a new, better them by the end of their stay. (Given the personalities we meet this season, a lot of them could use it!) But a vacation isn’t a cure-all, and the outside world inevitably comes crashing into the guests’ perfect vacation bubbles.

Like the prior two White Lotus seasons, what follows is a pressure cooker of social tensions and personal crises, all leading up to a deadly conclusion. But where Seasons 1 and 2 felt more thematically focused and physically contained — the latter more so in Season 1 due to COVID-19 restrictions — Season 3 threatens to spiral into bloat, only thinly skimming the surface of its heady themes.

The White Lotus Season 3 welcomes a few too many guests.

Carrie Coon, Michelle Monaghan, and Leslie Bibb in "The White Lotus."

Carrie Coon, Michelle Monaghan, and Leslie Bibb in “The White Lotus.”
Credit: Fabio Lovino/HBO

That bloat kicks off with Season 3’s extensive cast, a White Lotus staple from season to season. On this outing, though, the disparity between which group of guests gets the most airtime is much higher, making for a more disjointed season.

Among our main groups is the Ratliff family, headed up by businessman Timothy (Jason Isaacs, Baldur’s Gate 3) and his Lorazepam-loving wife Victoria (Parker Posey, Beau Is Afraid). They’ve headed to Thailand so their daughter Piper (Sarah Catherine Hook, First Kill) can work on her college thesis about Buddhism, and their sons Saxon (Patrick Schwarzenegger, Gen V) and Lochlan (Sam Nivola, White Noise) are along for the ride.

If you thought Season 2’s Cameron (Theo James) was a nightmare, you aren’t ready for the toxic finance bro energy Schwarzenegger brings to Saxon. Lochlan, for his part, seems torn between which two of his eldest siblings to emulate. Should he try to be more like the spiritual yet naive Piper? Or should he embrace Saxon’s protein shake-chugging masculinity?

Lochlan’s identity crisis isn’t the only one at the White Lotus. When Timothy learns he’s been implicated in a major white collar crime, he reflects on who he could be if he loses everything, and how he might break the news to his family. Elsewhere, conflicted traveler Rick (Walton Goggins, Fallout) grapples with long-ago family trauma, while his younger girlfriend, Chelsea, (Aimee Lou Wood, Sex Education) encourages him to take in everything the wellness resort has to offer. Maybe he’s one life-changing massage away from being less stressed-out. Questions of identity extend to the White Lotus staff too, with security guard Gaitok (Tayme Thapthimthong) trying to decide what kind of man he wants to be in order to impress his crush, hotel health mentor Mook (Lalisa Manobal, also known as BLACKPINK’s Lisa).

White spends the meat of the season with the Ratliffs and Rick and Chelsea, each of whom use different coping mechanisms, from drugs to meditation, to be “well.” Ironically, many of these guests seem to get little relief from the treatments they traveled thousands of miles to receive.

The White Lotus is doing too much in Season 3.

Natasha Rothwell in "The White Lotus."

Natasha Rothwell in “The White Lotus.”
Credit: Fabio Lovino / HBO

But in the midst of the Ratliff and Rick and Chelsea storylines, The White Lotus loses focus on some of its other compelling new additions. The story of longtime friends Jaclyn (Michelle Monaghan, MaXXXine), Kate (Leslie Bibb, Juror #2), and Laurie (Carrie Coon, His Three Daughters) reuniting for vacation is rife with juicy power dynamics, commentary on aging, and sniping gossip — all of which are heightened by Jaclyn’s status as a famous TV actress. Yet there’s little connective tissue between the trio and the rest of the goings-on at the White Lotus, to the point that Monaghan, Bibb, and Coon often feel like they’re in a bubble off to the side.

Suffering the same fate is The White Lotus Season 1’s spa manager Belinda (Natasha Rothwell, How to Die Alone), who’s in Thailand to learn more about their world-class offerings. The first six episodes sent to critics for screening make it clear that her story is building to something major, but for now, her presence feels like too little, too late. (Especially considering how wonderful Rothwell is in the role.)

Belinda and the trio aren’t the only characters who seem to be getting the short end of the stick this season. Hotel manager Fabian (Christian Friedel, The Zone of Interest) doesn’t get much to do compared to his predecessors Armand (Murray Bartlett) and Valentina (Sabrina Impacciatore). Plus, his dreams of singing at the hotel feel like leftovers from Season 2, when Mia (Beatrice Grannò) begged Valentina to let her perform in the White Lotus lounge.

The White Lotus Season 3 still offers up great performances and juicy drama.

Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood in "The White Lotus."

Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood in “The White Lotus.”
Credit: Fabio Lovino / HBO

Despite its many shortcomings, The White Lotus Season 3 still nails many aspects of its formula. Its cast (even the underused members) is aces across the board, with special shout-outs in order to Posey and Wood. Even though Victoria and Chelsea’s partners are the ones who go on the most emotionally fraught journeys, neither Posey nor Wood fade into the background as accessories to tortured men. Instead, the pair are delightful mirrors to one another: Victoria experiences life through a lens of judgment and old money, while Chelsea is a free spirit raring to go wherever life takes her. Their differences aside, these characters both end up with some of the funniest lines and scenes of the show.

The White Lotus continues to gift us with outrageous moments ready for internet notoriety this season, although nothing so far has topped, “These gays, they’re trying to murder me.” Dinner scenes remain rife with awkward conversations and nasty one-liners (most of them from Saxon), with White clearly reveling in skewering out-of-touch wealthy people, no matter where they fall on the political spectrum. White also pushes the envelope further this season, exploring new threats and taboos that left me freaking out.

Overall, though, the season so far feels like The White Lotus is floundering in its attempts to both expand on its formula and stay true to it at the same time. It wants to have everything at once: soapy drama and spiritual commentary, the resort’s claustrophobia and a long side excursion to Bangkok. Unfortunately, the result is at once overstuffed and underdeveloped, albeit with a slim glimmer of hope that the finale can pull all these disparate threads together in spectacular fashion.

The White Lotus Season 3 premieres Feb. 16 at 9 p.m. ET on HBO and Max.

“}]] Mashable Read More 

 “The White Lotus” Season 3, which stars Parker Posey, Jason Isaacs, and more, is both overstuffed and underwhelming.