![]() What grounds it is Hazel’s journey from kept woman to action hero, determined not to be a character in somebody else’s love story. “Made for Love” is a loopy jolt to the cortex that demands a high tolerance for absurdity. “Objectively!”īut it’s Milioti who gives the season’s first half (I’ve seen four episodes of eight) its adrenaline. “I am the only person who actually loves you!” he pleads to Hazel. He’s also pitiable, insofar as a billionaire with godlike powers can be. He’s the epitome of both the obsessive Wife Guy and the hubristic Tech Guy, and he makes plain the connection between the two types. Inept at most human relationships, Byron has funneled all his emotional capacity into Hazel, out of both passion and the gamifying impulse to get the all-time high score on his marriage. Romano, meanwhile, may be one of the few actors you could introduce in bed with a humanoid sex toy, whom he dresses in his dead wife’s clothing, yet have your viewer think, “You know, this seems like a complicated guy who’s been through a few rough patches.”Īnd Magnussen, given the broadest of the central roles, pushes Byron’s zealotry past tilt. Among those is the question of why Hazel, presented as a wily, resourceful skeptic, would have been swept off her feet by Byron, who from their first meeting throws up enough red flags for a giant slalom course. But it’s playful and funny and almost momentum-driven enough to get away with hand-waving away its many implausibilities. “Made for Love” is hardly subtle, and its cautionary tech tale has been told repeatedly in “Black Mirror” and elsewhere. Their one-way relationship is an echo of what Byron is trying to make Hazel into, a wife machine, but it’s also oddly tender and respectful. The story of college students and their realization of first. Watch their relationships deepen as they tumble toward. And when Hazel seeks help from her widowed father, Herb (Ray Romano), she finds him having taken up a committed partnership with a sex doll - sorry, “synthetic partner” - named Diane. Five young friends find their first loves. The metaphors are never far under the surface here, like Byron and Hazel’s double-finger wedding bands, reminiscent of tiny handcuffs. (Christina Lee of the mordant “Search Party” is the showrunner other producers include Patrick Somerville of Netflix’s “Maniac,” with which this shares a skeevy-dystopian vibe.) (Turns out he implanted only her chip, not his: “I had to read your diary first to know if I could let you read mine.”)īased on the novel of the same name by Alissa Nutting, a writer and producer on the series, “Made for Love” plays out as a screwball action satire, which likely makes its chilling premise - patriarchy and techno-utopianism as two sides of the same chip - go down easier than it would as a straight drama. This impels her to fly the cube, a madcap and violent escape with Byron watching from behind her eyeballs. For the purposes of the story, what’s important is that Byron wants it and Hazel emphatically does not. Who the hell would want that? you might ask, a question “Made for Love” raises but doesn’t entirely answer. (Feel free to play around with the first vowel sound in “Gogol.”) For 10 years, they’ve lived in a gilded cage - or rather a gilded cube, a virtual-reality environment called the Hub, secluded from the messy outside world, with eternally perfect weather and a dolphin sporting in the swimming pool. Hazel Green (Milioti) received this unwanted hardware upgrade from her husband, Byron Gogol (Billy Magnussen), who runs a world-dominating tech company. ![]() ![]() In “Made for Love,” a light-handed and dark-minded comedy of technology, control and gaslighting whose first three episodes arrive Thursday on HBO Max, the snare is all in her head.Īs in physically. In last year’s “Palm Springs,” she and Andy Samberg puzzled out how to break free of a time loop that stuck them in a vicious “Groundhog Day” rom-com cycle. ![]() In the “Black Mirror” episode “USS Callister,” she was programmed into a simulation by her creepy boss. Window.APP_STATE = JSON.Cristin Milioti has claimed a curiously specific character niche: woman escaping from twisted sci-fi trap. All rights reserved.SupportTerms of UsePrivacy Polic圜ookie PolicyDo Not Sell My Personal Information Please enable it or install a modern browser that support JavaScript.ĬareersPartnersAbout usWhere to watchSupportThis feature is coming soon.We’re currently working on it! Thanks for your patience.About UsOur StoryLeadershipNewsPressCareersBecoming A CitizenResponsibilitiesPerksWhere To WatchSmart TVStreaming DevicesMobile AppDesktop AppWatch on the webAccessibilityPartnersDistributionContent ProvidersAdvertisers© 2022 Pluto Inc. This website needs JavaScript to work properly.
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