‘The White Lotus’ Season 2: Hidden Clues in the Opening Credits

The White Lotus is quickly making a claim for having some of the best opening titles out there. Along with the provocative Renaissance-style images that make up season 2’s title sequence, Emmy-winning composer Cristobal Tapia de Vere is back with a remix of season 1’s eclectic ear worm (check out his soundtrack to 2013 British series Utopia for more electrifying tunes).

Season 2’s decadent, yet increasingly sinister opening credits are from Katrina Crawford and Mark Bashore, who also created those for season 1. The pair don’t plant overt clues to the multiple deaths in this season, instead drawing symbolic meanings to each of the character’s journeys. Let’s dissect those meanings based on the four episodes of season 2 that have already aired and attempt to predict what salacious hi jinks are to come.

Warning: Spoilers ahead.

The traditional lovers

The first image we see in season 2’s opening credits shows a man bowing to a curtseying woman — a scene of what appears to be traditional Renaissance lovers (the style of art emerged in Italy in the late 14th century). Here, titles creators Crawford and Bashore are setting up the themes of the Sicily-set second season: Where season 1 focused on privilege and colonialization, season 2 explores themes of male heterosexuality.

In the bottom left corner, a shield shows two rings connected by healthy branches. In the other: two wedding rings run through by a dagger. These rings seem to represent the statuses of the two central married couples in season 2: the crumbling solidarity of Harper (Aubrey Plaza) and Ethan (Will Sharpe), and the accepted duplicity of Cameron (Theo James) and Daphne (Meghann Fahy).

Then the camera zooms in and reveals a woman spying on the two lovers. This could be another sign of infidelity (in episode 3, Cameron sleeps with sex worker Lucia), as well as reflecting Harper’s interest in the secrets behind Cameron and Daphne’s loving front (also in episode 3, Daphne reveals she’s aware of Cameron’s infidelity).

Four holidayers standing on a boat clinking wine glasses

And everything started so well.


Fabio Lovino/HBO

The woman and the chained monkey

The camera pans up to show a blond woman holding a chain attached to a monkey. This could be interpreted in many ways — if the woman is meant to represent Tanya (Jennifer Coolidge), then the monkey could be her husband Greg (Joe Gries), who feels indebted to Tanya after she paid for his medical bills and essentially saved his life. The monkey could also be a symbol for Tanya’s assistant Portia (Hayley Lu Richardson), forced to go on vacation with her boss.

The innocent man, the babies and the sphinx

Crawford and Bashore have even layered in meaning when an actor’s name appears in the opening credits. In an interview, they revealed that the coinciding image when an actor’s name appears reflects the traits and journey of their character. The next scene shows a man playing music for a woman with a happy-looking dog nearby. Here, actor Adam DiMarco’s name appears — DiMarco plays the sincere and naive Stanford graduate Albie, who seems intent on acting like a gentleman toward women, unlike his father.

Next, we see actor Meghann Fahy’s name appear over an ornate image of two naked baby boys. When not on holiday, Fahy’s character Daphne is a stay-at-home mother.

Then actor Beatrice Grannò’s name appears with a gold sphinx — her character Mia, an aspiring singer, resists her friend Lucia’s attempts to introduce her to sex work… until episode 4, when she suddenly chooses to have sex with pianist Giuseppe in order to further her musical career. People who are mysterious can be referred to as a sphinx, so maybe Mia is destined for even more twists and turns.

A young woman in a red top talking to an older man at a piano

Mia accepts Giuseppe’s proposition.


HBO

The donkey and the lovers

Actor Jon Gries’ name appears next over an image of a man and a woman riding a donkey — a donkey almost shiftily looking over its shoulder toward us. This could symbolize Gries’ character Greg potentially cheating on his wife Tanya with another woman. In episode 2, Greg leaves Tanya alone at the resort, saying he has to fly back to Denver for work.

We then see the names of actors Tom Hollander and Sabrina Impacciatore over men and women separated on either sides of a room. This seems to point to how Hollander’s character Quentin, a wealthy gay British expat, is on holiday with his friends. Meanwhile Impacciatore’s character Valentina, the resort manager, seems to reveal feelings for receptionist Isabella (Eleonora Romandini) in episode 4.

The cracked fresco, a giant statue and fighting birds

In an intriguing fresco set on the water, we see a man bowing down before a younger man and a woman who drops a necklace into the sea. Actor Michael Imperioli’s name appears here — his character Dominic, a sex addict and father of Albie, might be begging forgiveness from both his son and wife, who’re disgusted by his affairs and betrayal.

Next we see actor Theo James’ name over a giant naked statue of a man — in episode 1, James’ character Cameron deliberately undresses and exposes himself to Harper. Here, we also see a dog peeing on the statue — a show of disrespect toward everything it represents.

Above, we see two birds at war with each other, alongside actor Aubrey Plaza’s name. The pecking birds could represent the fall and destruction Plaza’s character Harper is facing after discovering her husband Ethan lied to her about what he and Cameron really got up to while Harper and Daphne were away at the fancy palazzo in Noto.

Three generations of men standing on a boat before a hotel manager

The three generations of Di Grasso men.


Fabio Lovino/HBO

The sacrificial lamb and the offering

In the next scene, alongside actor Haley Lu Richardson’s name, we see what looks like a lamb and a maid sitting on the ground. Richardson’s character Portia is at her boss Tanya’s beck and call, so maybe the maid represents her low status. It also looks like the maid has her back turned to the lamb — maybe the lamb is supposed to represent Albie, the man Portia found overly gentle, innocent and unexciting in comparison to Quentin’s charismatic and cheeky nephew Jack (Leo Woodall).

The next scene is a tad confusing — it shows a man making an offering to a regal-looking woman, with actor Will Sharpe’s name. Is this Sharpe’s character Ethan serving Harper an apology? Or is this to represent his newfound wealth that he’s sharing with her?

The cat and the aggressive men

Next up: a small cat with leopard spots and a little bird in its mouth, slinking around a column. Actor Simona Tabasco’s name appears here — she plays local hustler and sex worker Lucia, who exclaims in episode 4 that she turned her previously conservative friend Mia into a monster. Maybe Mia’s innocence is supposed to be the little dead bird in the cat’s mouth.

Actor Leo Woodall’s name appears next, alongside an image of one man standing over another in what looks like a threatening manner: the former’s foot is placed in a pretty perilous positing between the latter’s legs. Could there be a nasty confrontation in the cards for Woodall’s character Jack?

The burning building and the white swan

As the beat of the music ramps up, the images become even more explicit. We see:

  • A hotel-like building burning in the distance — no prizes for guessing the meaning behind this one (things are about to metaphorically go up in flames at The White Lotus)
  • Two men engaged in sexuality activity on a beach
  • Goats also engaged in a sexual act
  • Three circular holes in the side of a wall — which could represent the three generations of the Di Grasso men and their behaviour toward women following a circular pattern
  • General scenes of violence and blood
  • A woman being seduced by a swan — this seems to be a clear reference to the story of Leda and the swan in Greek mythology, where the god Zeus transforms into a swan and rapes Leda, the queen of Sparta
  • A fountain rising — a phallic image

Three episodes of The White Lotus, season 2, remain. So, with these clues, there’s still time to put on your deerstalker and deduce the twisted fates of the not-so-picture-perfect guests at The White Lotus.

source: cnet.com