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Review: ‘Love, Victor,’ Gay Teen Angst With A Latino Twist

Supported by his loving Latino family, Victor seems to be finding his way. Season two of the Hulu series starts June 11.

By Roberto Leal 

Hulu’s Original TV series, Love, Victor, takes a sensitive, considered and often humorous exploration into the journey of Victor Salazar’s search for his true sexual identity. Michael Cimino (Annabelle Comes Home, Training Day) portrays Victor with a nuanced naivete and wholesome earnestness that makes him a sympathetic and likeable character. 

Teenage angst has been the subject matter of countless movies and TV shows. Films like Romeo & Juliet, Rebel Without a Cause, Sixteen Candles, Clueless and Twilight. TV shows like Square Pegs, Beverly Hills 90210, Dawson’s Creek and East Los High have chronicled the trials and tribulations of the teen years ranging from alienation, not fitting in, dysfunctional family life, not having enough money, having too much money and falling in love with a 108-year old vampire. But the times have changed. 

Love, Victor (Credit: Hulu)

After Stonewall, gay liberation, gay pride parades, Queer Nation, LGBTQ and the legalization and almost total societal acceptance of same-sex marriage, we now have a plethora of films and TV shows exploring the problems of teens questioning their sexuality and the dilemma of coming out of the closet. 

MEET THE SALAZAR FAMILY 

Victor’s story begins when his family hastily and mysteriously relocates from Texas to Atlanta. Atlanta? Why? Well, the official press release-like explanation is that Victor’s father, Armando, James Martinez (Run All Night, God Friended Me) has found new employment in The Peach State. But we find out the real reason is Armando’s wife, Isabella, Ana Ortiz (Ugly Betty, Delicious Meals) had an affair with her boss. Armando beats him up and feels obligated to leave Texas and yank the clan to Georgia. I don’t know. In Texas, if a husband beats up his wife’s lover they give him a parade, the keys to the city and write a Country and Western song about him sung by Willie Nelson. 

Isabella Ferreira (Orange Is the New Black, Beyond My Skin) plays Pilar, Victor’s younger sister. Pilar is suffering from her own separation angst from her life and friends back in Texas and tends to act out. Little brother, Adrian, Mateo Fernandez (Love, Victor) takes it all in stride and is wise (but thank you, writers) not obnoxiously precocious beyond his tender years. Kudos have to be given to the creators and writers of Love, Victor, Becky Albertalli, Elizabeth Berger and Isaac Aptaker for framing Victor’s story around a close-knit Latino family in a positive light. Martinez’s Armando is a patient, even-handed, understanding father to his family. Armando makes Ward Cleaver look like the evil villain Fagin from Charles Dickens’ Oliver Twist. 

Ortiz as Victor’s mom, Isabella, adroitly weaves through a web of emotions as she deals with her son’s emergence from out of the closet, her troubled marriage and unhappy daughter, Pilar. Ferreira’s portrayal of Pilar, Victor’s younger sister, is a delicate, emotional tight-rope walking act as she balances her bitterness about leaving Texas, disappointment with her mother, social insecurities and worship of her older brother, Victor. Fernandez turns little brother Adrian into the sweet, unassuming kis brother you just want to go for ice cream and a day at the park.

Cimino, who is of Italian/Puerto Rican heritage, is surrounded and in the warm, family embrace of his co-stars. The Salazars’ family chemistry is a definite plus in Love, Victor. 

Love, Victor (Credit: Hulu/Mitchell Haaseth)

Love, Victor is based on the continuation of a previous film, Love, Simon, also by the creative team of Albertalli, Aptaker and Berger, with a similar premise. The main character, Simon, played by Nick Robinson (Jurassic World, Everything, Everything) has been magically teleported to Love, Victor and is now Victor’s mentor. As the new kid at the upscale Creekwood High School, Victor has a brief romance with Mia, a pretty African-American girl nicely played by Rachel Wilson (This is Us, The Americans). Mia is struggling with her sense of betrayal and abandonment by a mother who has disappeared and a father who is more interested in professional advancement at the expense of her happiness. 

Bebe Wood (The Real O’Neals, The New Normal as Lake, George Sear (Will, When Fate Calls)as Benjie and Anthony Turpel (9-11, This is Us) as Felix round out a fine supporting cast. 

LOOKS AIN’T EVERYTHING BUT IT SURE HELPS 

Everyone in Love, Victor looks like they stepped out of a fashion magazine. Not an untucked shirt or wrinkled skirt in sight. The show’s production values are first-rate thanks to the cinematography of Mark Schwartzbard Jp Wakayama and production design by Cece Destefano. 

WHAT’S NEXT? 

Victor Salazar crossed a threshold when he came out of the closet and began his journey to discover his true sexual identity. There have been inevitable setbacks, conflicts, heartaches and disappointments. But aided by his mentor, Simon, his Creekwood High School pals and his loving Latino family, he seems to be finding his way.

But what lies ahead for Victor? Will he return to his native Texas and live and thrive in his true identity in one of the large, vibrant LGBTQ communities in Dallas, Houston or Austin? Will Victor have to navigate the sexual identity landscape defined by terms like no-binary and pansexual? 

Regardless of where the storyline for Love, Victor takes us, it will be interesting to see his anticipated transformation when he emerges from his chrysalis and takes flight. 

Season 2 of Love, Victor airs on Hulu on June 11. 

Featured Photo: Michael Cimino in Love, Victor (Credit: Hulu/Mitchell Haddad)

https://youtu.be/S7iyAHFoih8

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