Amor Fati
- Episode aired Apr 6, 2025
- TV-MA
- 1h 27m
IMDb RATING
7.9/10
9.3K
YOUR RATING
Laurie, Jaclyn and Kate reckon with their friendship; Timothy comes up with a shocking plan for his family; Belinda considers a deal.Laurie, Jaclyn and Kate reckon with their friendship; Timothy comes up with a shocking plan for his family; Belinda considers a deal.Laurie, Jaclyn and Kate reckon with their friendship; Timothy comes up with a shocking plan for his family; Belinda considers a deal.
Patravadi Mejudhon
- Sritala Hollinger
- (as Lek Patravadi)
Featured reviews
Crazy build up in the first 7 episodes this season, with little to no release until the final episode. While all the story lines came to an end, this season lacked a storyline that linked all the vacation goers together like past seasons. I was hoping for a bigger pay off because of all the build up but everything that happened was pretty much foreseen to anyone who was consciously watching.
Really hope season 4 gets back to the roots of what made this show the phenomenon it's become. If there's more seasons like this, I'm afraid the show will lose the OG White Lotus fan base.
I love the concept and the vibe of each resort and I can't wait to see where the next season will take place. Crossing my fingers it's more interesting than season 3 🤞🏼
Really hope season 4 gets back to the roots of what made this show the phenomenon it's become. If there's more seasons like this, I'm afraid the show will lose the OG White Lotus fan base.
I love the concept and the vibe of each resort and I can't wait to see where the next season will take place. Crossing my fingers it's more interesting than season 3 🤞🏼
The White Lotus for the third season Mike White takes us to Thailand for a whole new cast of narcissistic characters who think they are privileged. We first meet the Radliff family headed by Jason Isaac, his wife Parker Posey and their kids Lochlan (Sam Nivola), daughter Piper (Sarah Catherine Hook), and Saxon (Patrick Schwarzenegger). At first Patrick's character was self confident and full of himself but by the end his brother was viewed as a better person and Patrick lost himself along with his attitude. Over the course of this season we learn Jason is about to lose his company and spends most the time drugging himself and being out of touch from his family while Parker is the most annoying character who feels so privileged that she can't see herself living any other way except for her current life. We then meet lifelong friends Leslie Gibbs, Michelle Monaghan who plays a famous actress along with Carrie Coon. The ladies are mischievous and backstabbing especially against each other, but they are their to forget but we learn they carry their baggage with them wherever they go. Walton Goggins and Aimee Lou Wood are there to find one another but Walton has other ideas. He meets up with his friend Rick (Sam Rockwell) to try to get close to the owners of the hotel to bring meaning to his life and to learn what happened to his real father. The owners were played by Scott Glenn and Lek Patravadi who helped set up the heath wellness program at the hotel. On a side story Tayme Thapthimthong plays a security guard at the hotel who is in love with Mook (Lalisa Manobal) a talented actress who entertains and guides guests on the property. The only two recurring characters were Jon Gries who is trying to stay away from drama and Natasha Rothwell who is back from the first season. This season was dragging and there isn't one character you would root for. The ending became predictable but the one thing I can take away from this show is that life is precious and should be looked at as a single drop of water till we return to the ocean.
It's hard for me to find the words to explain how I felt immediately after watching this episode. I was squirming for almost 90 minutes, and then it was done. I felt this strange mixture of relief and pity that felt more understated than the endings of other WL season finales.
Each group/couple brings specific bits of real life self-reflection that remind us that human imperfection is native. We are all flawed individuals with biased viewpoints... if that's not something to satirize, then I don't know what is.
At its roots this is a character driven show that consistently delivers complex roles and superb acting. Whether or not the ending was what you wanted isn't the point-it went where it was supposed to go. Embracing your fate is a prominent theme this season, and the ending felt true.
If I could change some of the characters decisions, I would. Not because it wasn't true to them, but because I wish better for them. The way our perceptions bend for these characters is truly something special.
This finale is of course tentative and divisive. It challenges our first impressions and is transformative for each character. Who you like and dislike isn't a determination of who's "good" or "bad" but rather a reflection of our morals and perceptions.
It may not have been as satisfying as other WL endings, but the bar was set really high.
Each group/couple brings specific bits of real life self-reflection that remind us that human imperfection is native. We are all flawed individuals with biased viewpoints... if that's not something to satirize, then I don't know what is.
At its roots this is a character driven show that consistently delivers complex roles and superb acting. Whether or not the ending was what you wanted isn't the point-it went where it was supposed to go. Embracing your fate is a prominent theme this season, and the ending felt true.
If I could change some of the characters decisions, I would. Not because it wasn't true to them, but because I wish better for them. The way our perceptions bend for these characters is truly something special.
This finale is of course tentative and divisive. It challenges our first impressions and is transformative for each character. Who you like and dislike isn't a determination of who's "good" or "bad" but rather a reflection of our morals and perceptions.
It may not have been as satisfying as other WL endings, but the bar was set really high.
The anthology serie's third season of good actors playing rich people at a beautiful resort with some prestige TV dialogue and a dash of mystery and murder is overall a bit of letdown, or a reversion to the mean after the very good second season. It's glacially-paced until the absurd ending and the big narrative twists were all telegraphed, obvious and predictable. I think Mike White has some obvious talents as a writer, but the show is in need of a few more screenwriters on its roster. The dialogue is good but concise, giving the actors space to shine. I had actually thought about not watching this season because of how they stole a role from Milos Bikovic after a slanderous and untrue campaign, but it's still a show to watch.
Schwarzenegger is a carbon copy of his father, but a much better actor. For me, he was a very positive surprise and I think he has it in him to have a good career. Parker Posey's performance and accent were the season's MVP: it is a shame the writing couldn't give her more in the final episode so that she could give some tragedy, not just comedy. Goggins' character was wafer-thin, but if he's finally getting mainstream recognition as a first-class actor, that's alright. The entire cast has no real duds, and is the highlight of the season along with some reliably good dialogue and beautiful filming of Thailand.
Schwarzenegger is a carbon copy of his father, but a much better actor. For me, he was a very positive surprise and I think he has it in him to have a good career. Parker Posey's performance and accent were the season's MVP: it is a shame the writing couldn't give her more in the final episode so that she could give some tragedy, not just comedy. Goggins' character was wafer-thin, but if he's finally getting mainstream recognition as a first-class actor, that's alright. The entire cast has no real duds, and is the highlight of the season along with some reliably good dialogue and beautiful filming of Thailand.
A lot of build up this season throughout every episode, a lot of tension needing to be released somewhere, a lot of pressure in every episode and a lot of journey that somehow doesn't lead anywhere. I feel like a lot of stories weren't really finished in a way they should be finished, it feels like it's not the end even though it is. There's several stories that were building up quite dynamically just for them to be let there and not be ended at all. Looks like a lot of stories, characters and things didn't really have any purpose. I don't know if that's intentional or not. In both cases, it's a bad storytelling. Jason isaacs is such a daddy tho.
Did you know
- TriviaThe episode's title comes from Latin, and is loosely translated as "Love of fate".
- GoofsWhen Loche finds the blender with the found looking pong-pong fruit in it, there is no way anyone, especially a fastidious teenager, would have not at least rinsed out the blender. This is more so the case since Tim had previously declared that the coconut milk was bad.
- Quotes
Belinda Lindsey: Can't I just be rich for five fucking minutes?
- SoundtracksRawng ni dng chba
Performed by P-Hot feat. F.Hero, Pu Chan Long Mike & RachYO
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
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- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 27m(87 min)
- Color
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