Mashable 02月14日
Yellowjackets Season 3: If you were disappointed by Season 2, just wait
index_new5.html
../../../zaker_core/zaker_tpl_static/wap/tpl_guoji1.html

 

《黄蜂》第三季开局不利,未能延续前两季的精彩。尽管偶尔有令人震惊的时刻,但本季的故事线显得松散,尤其是在成年组的时间线上。剧情似乎不清楚如何处理几位主要角色,并且在原地踏步,直到回到第一季令人恐惧的开场。青少年组的故事线也缺乏动力,角色发展不足。总而言之,《黄蜂》第三季在角色塑造和剧情推进方面都存在问题,难以达到第一季的高度。

🏕️青少年组在小屋烧毁后,建立了繁荣的公社,但Shauna对Van美化团队经历的恐怖事件感到不满,团队成员之间的矛盾加剧,Natalie作为领导者的地位也受到挑战。

💔成年组方面,大家似乎很快就走出了Natalie去世的阴影,只有Misty沉浸在悲痛中。Shauna的女儿Callie继续追问荒野中发生的事情,同时一个神秘人物试图联系她。Tai和Van重燃旧情,但这条故事线进展缓慢,显得有些无聊。

🎭角色塑造方面,许多角色没有得到充分利用。例如,Lottie在青少年组中被边缘化,成年组中也没有发挥重要作用。Melissa和Mari等角色也难以脱颖而出,与Shauna等主要角色相比,显得黯然失色。

🎬剧情推进方面,第三季的节奏更加缓慢,虽然有一些令人震惊的悬念,但并没有得到充分利用。Hilary Swank饰演的神秘角色在前四集中甚至没有出现。该剧似乎在拖延时间,未能尽快回到第一季开头的食人场景。

In its first season, Yellowjackets' blend of survival thriller tropes, tantalizing mysteries, and the savagery of high school girls made it must-see TV. In its second outing, the show delivered some much-anticipated cannibalism and further explored the adult Yellowjackets' trauma. But wonky pacing and an unfulfilling 21st-century storyline meant that Season 2 couldn't reach the exquisite highs of Season 1. Was the show in decline, or was Season 2 just a misstep?

After watching the first four episodes of Season 3, the answer is unfortunately the former.

Despite the occasional jaw-dropping moment, Yellowjackets continues to feel unmoored this season, especially when it comes to its adult timeline. Not only does the series have no clue what to do with several members of its ensemble — it also seems like it's just treading water until it can get to its terrifying Season 1 cold open.

What's Yellowjackets Season 3 about?

Christina Ricci in "Yellowjackets." Credit: Colin Bentley / Paramount+ with SHOWTIME

Yellowjackets Season 2 ended with the teen Yellowjackets' cabin burning down — presumably at the hands of Coach Ben (Steven Krueger) — and the promise of a tough winter without shelter. Season 3 skips ahead to the summer, when the team has built a thriving commune complete with animal pens and exquisitely build shelters. In a speech celebrating the summer solstice, Van (Liv Hewson) catches us up to speed on what we missed in the time jump as well as the events of Season 2, a moment of self-mythologizing that also doubles as an eyeroll-worthy recap. ("Previously, on the Yellowjackets," Van says, in a meta nod that falls flat.)

Shauna (Sophie Nélisse), on the other hand, wants no part in Van's sanitizing of the horrors the team has endured (and committed) — understandably so, given the still-fresh loss of her baby. Her anger, which mostly manifests in fights with the ever-annoying Mari (Alexa Barajas, taking on a bigger role this season), will drive a wedge between team members and challenge current leader Natalie's (Sophie Thatcher, Companion) hold on power. Natalie, for her part, is in a precarious position: How can she protect Coach Ben while her teammates beg for his blood?

In the present, the adult Yellowjackets grieve the loss of Natalie (Juliette Lewis). Well, Misty (Christina Ricci) does, at any rate. Aside from one scene of post-funeral commiseration, it seems like Shauna (Melanie Lynskey), Taissa (Tawny Cypress), and Van (Lauren Ambrose) have moved on fairly quickly. That most of the grief falls on Misty makes sense given her role in Nat's death, but the other Yellowjackets' quick moving on cheapens Season 2's biggest loss.

It's not like they even move on to more exciting things! Shauna has to deal with her daughter Callie (Sarah Desjardins) prying further into what happened in the wilderness, as well as a mysterious new person trying to reach out to her. (Yes, the latter reads as an uninspired rehash of Season 1's blackmailing plot.) Meanwhile, Tai and Van rekindle their teen romance, but despite Cypress and Ambrose's solid chemistry, their arc feels like a boring, slow-moving side quest in an already unfocused present-day storyline. Take me back to when the adults were working together, instead of scattered.

Yellowjackets Season 3 doesn't know what to do with many of its characters.

Tawny Cypress, Lauren Ambrose, Warren Kole, and Melanie Lynskey in "Yellowjackets." Credit: Kailey Schwerman / Paramount+ with SHOWTIME

The unfortunate adult Tai and Van storyline is just one symptom of Yellowjackets' biggest problem: a lack of understanding of how to use its ensemble cast. (A similar problem has befallen The White Lotus, another show with an underwhelming third season.)

In any ensemble show, there are bound to be characters who fall to the wayside. But in Yellowjackets Season 3, these characters are among those who were set up to play a huge role. Teen Tai and Van are often sidelined as much as their adult counterparts, making story elements like Shauna and Tai's Season 1 bond a distant (and much-missed) memory. Lottie (played by Courtney Eaton and Simone Kessell) also gets short shrift this time around. Without a cruel winter pushing the team to put their faith in the wilderness, teen Lottie has been pushed to the sidelines, where she attempts more vague, spiritual practices that, despite some ominous visions, seem more like filler than anything meaningful. And remember how adult Lottie was set up as a major new arrival in Season 2? You'd be hard-pressed to find anything remotely close to that impact in Season 3.

Elsewhere, characters who get more airtime, like Melissa (Jenna Burgess) or Mari, struggle to stand out against the far more developed leads. One single joke about Melissa suddenly having a personality does not, in fact, a personality make! That disparity is even more clear when the two interact with Shauna, who remains the show's most fully-formed lead in both timelines. In the present, Yellowjackets dives deeper into her relationship with Misty, which results in scenes that, while fun, also remind us of all the rich interpersonal dynamics we could be having across the season if Yellowjackets knew how best to showcase its incredible cast.

Did Yellowjackets set itself up for failure?

Sophie Thatcher in "Yellowjackets." Credit: Kailey Schwerman / Paramount+ with SHOWTIME

Aside from its shoddy character work, Season 3 of Yellowjackets meanders even more than Season 2. Yes, there are a collection of episode-ending cliffhangers that will shock viewers, but don't expect Yellowjackets to do much with them — certainly not an intriguing kiss that feels more and more like wasted potential the further we get from it. Meanwhile, Hilary Swank, whose mystery role has been teased in Yellowjackets' trailers, doesn't even show up in the first four episodes.

The lack of propulsion feels extra egregious considering Yellowjackets' first-ever scene: the team hunting an unknown victim through the snowy woods as part of their ritualistic cannibalism. Said scene gives us a definitive ending point for the teen Yellowjackets' journey (aside from their rescue), but the show risks dragging its feet too long to get there. The Season 3 premiere even opens with a fake-out echoing that first hunt, so the show is aware how much we're craving that payoff. But three and a half years and two seasons have passed since that premiere, and as Yellowjackets continues to spin its wheels about what really happened in the wilderness, its momentum suffers.

Its present-day timeline suffers too, as the survivors are reduced to cryptic vagaries about "what we did out there" in order to surprise the audience about what other atrocities they committed as teenagers. There's only so much pussyfooting I can take, though, especially when Yellowjackets set itself such a high bar in Season 1.

In setting that bar — and specifically singling out that scene — Yellowjackets may have set itself an impossible task. Can it truly keep audiences invested in the show's many mysteries, several of which have remained mysteries since Season 1, over the course of its planned five-season arc? Based on the start of Season 3, with its unsatisfying character development and continued foot-dragging, it seems unlikely. Yellowjackets may already be running out of steam.

The first two episodes ofYellowjackets Season 3 are now streaming on Paramount+ with Showtime, with new episodes weekly.

Fish AI Reader

Fish AI Reader

AI辅助创作,多种专业模板,深度分析,高质量内容生成。从观点提取到深度思考,FishAI为您提供全方位的创作支持。新版本引入自定义参数,让您的创作更加个性化和精准。

FishAI

FishAI

鱼阅,AI 时代的下一个智能信息助手,助你摆脱信息焦虑

联系邮箱 441953276@qq.com

相关标签

黄蜂 第三季 剧评 角色发展 剧情节奏
相关文章