![]() ![]() In every season, Joe’s run away to a different city. No, but I think that makes sense in the vein of running away from your problems. And I feel like we sympathize with him because we, in some way, relate to him. And I think it makes all the sense in the world. Even when we're not Joe, this idea that we don't take responsibility, that we remain the same, that we can't recognize our responsibility and our part in our own struggle. I feel like it is representative of how a lot of us live. Speaking of the responsibility for your actions, I don't know if you feel differently because you were so immersed in your character, but for me, it was very frustrating to see Joe just walk away again. It takes a lot of courage to admit that you're wrong, to grow, to change. And so much of the show is about these people who, instead of doing the hard work, they find this “easy”-and I say that in quotations-option of just murdering people, as if that will ever be a fully satisfying solution for these issues they have within themselves. The way we treat others is directly related, I believe, to how we treat ourselves. ![]() The idea that murdering is the way to find herself is still probably, I want to say taking “the easy route” but, I think that's always the issue with the show is that instead of doing more rigorous work, instead of taking responsibility for your actions.It was just Yom Kippur, so I was thinking about repentance and what it is to treat people well and take responsibility for your behavior. It's her realizing that she does deserve a better life and then she doesn't get to fulfill or realize that. I think it's really interesting you mentioned that because that last conversation that Love has with Marienne was kind of tragic. I think there's something really tragic about the ending and also beautiful and also a bit of a warning towards the importance of being authentic for yourself and not forgetting yourself fighting for yourself and your desires.īadgley and Pedretti as Joe and Love. So contemplating that, especially since that isn't my own lived experience. And that's kind of how the story starts off. I definitely found it interesting to explore what it is to be a young, first-time mother, entering into that role as a person in the world. I don't feel like I have extremely strong opinions, I just have to take on the character and what they're going through. What was your first impression of the season 3 script? “I'm very excited for what the future holds,” a confident Pedretti says. “Kacey reached out to me and I literally threw my phone across the room,” she gushes.īeyond that, Pedretti hints at more projects in the works, including directing and “experimenting with film as a medium, from different angles beyond acting.” And in her downtime, the music lover has buzzy albums on rotation from artists like Baby Keem, Snoh Aalegra, Tyler, the Creator, and Musgraves, of course (“Breadwinner” is a favorite). Country queen Kacey Musgraves even tapped her for a Mean Girls-esque cameo in her visual album star-crossed, along with Drag Race’s Symone and rapper Princess Nokia. She’s has already carved a career outside of You, starring in Netflix’s Haunting of Hill House and Bly Manor, appearing in Quentin Tarantino’s Once Upon a Time.in Hollywood, and landing the lead role in the upcoming adaptation of the novel Lucky by Alice Sebold (author of The Lovely Bones). ![]() home during our Zoom call, Pedretti is ready for what’s next. “I did start crying as me, very sad for what the character had to go through,” she says.īut, sitting in a white T-shirt in her L.A. The goodbye was emotional for Pedretti, too. The ending may be a gut punch to fans who fell in love with Pedretti’s Love, a California chef with a girl-next-door vibe and a dark, murderous history that could rival Joe’s. But in the end, he survives and kills her instead-faking his own death and burning their house down. At the end of season 3 comes the biggest shocker yet, when Love, upon discovering Joe’s infidelity, injects him with a poison meant to paralyze him. And it’s interwoven with real-life problems, like Love figuring out how to be a first-time mom, grieving her twin brother, and trying to keep her marriage alive. Surprise is the secret weapon of You, a drama that thrives on plot twists and suspenseful reveals. ( Caution: spoilers!) We’re effectively shocked when Love kills her neighbor, Natalie (Michaela McManus), for seducing her husband when she starts hooking up with college-aged Theo (Dylan Arnold) or when Joe starts a romance with the librarian, Marienne (Tati Gabrielle). Play icon The triangle icon that indicates to playĪs viewers, we can’t say we were as prepared. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |