Last year I reviewed the first season of The Hollow, the Netflix animated series about three kids working their way through the various worlds of a giant video game.
1. Strong leader Adam (Adrian Petriw)
2. Cut-up Kai (Connor Parnall)
3. Sensitive, intuitive Mira (Ashleigh Ball)
I liked the animation, and the complex plotlines, and found a gay subtext between Kai and Adam. I didn't like how Kai kept crushing on every girl in sight.
Season 2 just dropped. In the first episode, they all awaken back home. Or what they think is back home.
While Mira and her brother have breakfast, two men are discussing changing around their work schedues to go on vacation....wait...she has two Dads! Not just in the background, like on Ducktales, but talking, addressing her as their daughter, hugging.
No way to de-gay them as friends, roommates, or brothers. Let the Million Mom screeching begin.
But that's not all.
Adam has a giant rainbow flag on his bedroom wall! Not a little one. Not just in a blink-and-you-miss it shot. It's obviously hanging there throughout the entire scene.
Adam is gay!
He says the word in the second episode, explaining to Kai that he's not interested in Mira. Then Mira apologizes for trying to kiss him last season -- she wouldn't have, except for the amnesia they were all suffering from.
So Mira knew, but Kai didn't. They were together in the video game world for weeks, maybe months, and it never came up?
I'm not happy that the writers waited until Season 2 to out Adam, and it doesn't seem to be referenced again, except maybe in a bickering subtext with new character Reeve. (Fans suspect that they're ex-boyfriends.)
But those are minor quibbles.
There's a gay kid in The Hollow!
In other news, actor Connor Parnell, who plays Kai, is 26 years old, a graduate of the Canadian College of Performing Arts, and gay. Or does everyone already know that?
See: The Hollow
Love those cute cartoon-y photos! ๐๐๐
ReplyDeleteLet them screech. For my generation, it's entertaining.
ReplyDeleteIn other news, any variant on "computer world" in 2020. Add two sins: One for the clichรฉ, and one for thing everyone knows doesn't work that way.
It's just the "trapped far from home" trope that goes back to the boys' adveture stories of the 19th century, a way to get kids to have adventures without parental supervision. With some video game jargon thrown in, instead of magic or desert island.
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