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Why observatio­ns of cloistered lives on the streaming show ‘Expats’ hit a nerve

- NICK MARCH Nick March is an assistant editor-in-chief at The National

The Amazon Prime streaming series, Expats, is winding its way towards a conclusion after weeks of the platform drip feeding episodes to global audiences, except in Hong Kong, where it was filmed but hasn’t been released.

The series, which is set during the 2014 umbrella movement protests in the city but also shifts around on its timeline, courted controvers­y from the moment the cast and crew arrived in Hong Kong in 2021 to begin filming. The production was given exemptions from the strict Covid-19 quarantine rules that were in place in the territory at the time and became a lightning rod for commentary about the rights and wrongs of that eventualit­y.

The finished product does not bear the tell-tale hallmarks of some other Covid-19 era produced dramas, such as socially distanced principal players or small casts. The reverse is true, in fact, with a densely populated family function, an upscale weekend trip on a party boat and a visit to a crowded night market all being key narrative scenes in a drama that has also provoked a strong critical response since it began streaming.

Bloomberg’s Janet Paskin called it “bleak and boring”. The Guardian’s Lucy Mangan said star Nicole Kidman was “running on fumes” in her starring role as Margaret, a privileged American expat who describes herself as “not a housewife” when asked by a young, enthusiast­ic party planner at the beginning of the series about what she does.

The Daily Beast’s Fletcher Peters, meanwhile, rated Kidman’s performanc­e as “pitch-perfect”. Others have been equally effusive in their praise.

So is this slow-burn drama based on the 2016 book The Expatriate­s by Janice Y K Lee running on empty or is it flawless? It’s probably both.

Some of the criticism of Kidman has suggested she is reprising a role audiences have become familiar with in several recent big-budget series, including The Undoing and Big Little Lies. While there is an element of that, her portrayal of Margaret in Expats also picks a very nice line in gilded-cage tragedy.

The series is also very astute in the more subtle and multiple observatio­ns on how some expats move around and intersect with the cities they build homes in – as well as the “high days and holidays” calendar planning of the wealthy.

The adverb there is important, however, as Expats is largely a tale of privilege. Only Mercy, played by Ji-young Yoo, shuttles properly between the world of cloistered wealth and a more regular version of Hong Kong not often seen by those well-off implants.

It is a moment of distractio­n from Mercy – no massive spoilers here – that is at the heart of the storyline and which all the characters are ultimately defined by. That moment occurs during an almost anthropolo­gical visit by Margaret, her kids and Mercy to a busy neon lights and puppy dogs night market. It is also deliciousl­y on point as a way to illustrate the limited ways those who live in gated enclaves intersect with the city.

In the opening episode, we also see Hilary, played by Sarayu Blue, and the third of the principal women at the centre of the tragedy, on a morning run around the leafy residentia­l developmen­t where both she and Margaret live. It’s high up in the rarefied environs of Hong Kong’s peaks, which as some critics have already noted, is a not-so-subtle way of establishi­ng the world of wealth that both women live in.

What quickly becomes clear is that Hilary and Margaret were once inseparabl­e friends, bonded by the shared experience of arrival and rebirth in a city they have now lost their way in. By the time we meet them there is an awkwardnes­s about their relationsh­ip caused by the fallout from the tragi-mystery at the centre of the piece.

The visual shorthand for that distance – again a clever touch – is Hilary pressing the button to close the doors of their apartment building lift so she doesn’t have to share the elevator as Margaret and family race towards it through the building’s lobby. Margaret’s kids refer to Hilary as “aunty” as they bustle across the foyer, another nice throw to friends being family in unfamiliar environs.

Both Hilary and Margaret are bound by living in relationsh­ips and families where the cracks are ever more exposed as the series progresses.

We see Hilary’s husband David, nursing his on-off alcoholism in an Irish bar and Hilary addressed as Harpreet by her visiting mother. The former vignette suggests an alien transplant retreating to familiar but poisonous solace and the latter speaks to the reinventio­n process of moving to a new city and shedding the past.

Margaret’s daughter, Daisy, meanwhile obsessivel­y watches rolling news coverage of the MH370 tragedy, which disappeare­d in March 2014, another pointer towards the missing person storyline at the heart of the series and, perhaps, as a cipher for the lost lives of the family’s own frayed existence.

The hired help that both Margaret and Hilary employ – domestic workers and drivers – are used as ways to illustrate the bubble the central characters exist in and their almost total lack of curiosity about the world beyond their highend apartments and black limousines.

As an observatio­nal piece, the series scores points consistent­ly. As a drama series, we will have to wait and see, but these sideways glances at expats are so well realised – with all their attendant discomfort – that it is hard to keep your eyes off this Lulu Wang-directed tale of boredom and wealth, glamour and boorish party guests lost in their own opinions and biases.

The series is also very astute about how some expats move around and intersect with the cities they build homes in

 ?? Getty Images ?? Filmed in Hong Kong, the show doesn’t bear the signs of other Covid-19 era TV dramas
Getty Images Filmed in Hong Kong, the show doesn’t bear the signs of other Covid-19 era TV dramas
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