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Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
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https://slate.com/culture/2020/01/pa...rm-review.html
Chris Keyser and Amy Lippman's immigration-themed revival of the 1990s Fox drama is "important with a capital 'I' insofar as it is explicitly political, directly taking on the ruthless inhumanity of Trump’s immigration policy," says Willa Paskin. Party of Five is like a throwback teen drama about the centrality of family to the teen experience. But the fact that the parents are still alive and in another country makes the new version sadder and more wrenching. Unlike the original Party of Five's Salingers, "the Acostas are not awfully, simply without their parents. They are in an excruciating limbo," says Paskin. "They can FaceTime them, but they can’t have them. They exist but they have to pretend, protecting the adults from the financial and behavioral difficulties they face at school and at the restaurant. What the Salingers had to do was clear: Learn how to live without their parents. But the Acostas have a more complicated mandate: to outgrow their living parents, to learn not to need them, even when they can call them on the phone. The Salingers had to get on with their lives, however hard that was. But the Acostas can’t do that. The wound can’t begin to heal." ALSO:
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