By: [GAVARRE BENJAMIN]
Originally published on Cine Teatro y Crítica
Technical Specs and Production Context
- Title: Looking (TV Series, 2 seasons and a wrap-up movie)
- Creator: Michael Lannan
- Lead Director: Andrew Haigh
- Original Network: HBO
- Broadcast Years: 2014 – 2016
- Setting: San Francisco, California (primarily the iconic Castro District)
Between Post-AIDS Nostalgia and Gentrification
Watching Looking today allows us to appreciate it not just as entertainment, but as an invaluable sociological document. Broadcast by HBO in the mid-2010s, the series sidestepped crime melodrama and sitcom tropes in favor of pure naturalism. It transports us to San Francisco, the historic capital of the LGBTQ+ movement in the U.S. after World War II, portraying a crucial generational transition: the "post-AIDS" era.
Although the protagonists are in their late twenties and thirties, the ghost of the late-20th-century crisis still floats in the air. This is masterfully shown through characters over 60 and in the neuroses of the youth themselves—such as when the main character panics over a minor skin rash.
Character Radiography: Names, Class Conflicts, and Relationships
The brilliance of the series lies in its choral mosaic structure, where classism, ethnic background, and the search for a calling constantly clash:
- Patrick Murray (Jonathan Groff): The axis of the story. The actor—famous for the series Glee (where he paradoxically played the heterosexual Jesse St. James) and for his hilarious, campy portrayal of King George III in the Broadway phenomenon Hamilton—delivers an extraordinarily realistic performance here. Patrick is a white, well-to-do video game designer with a controlling mother. His arc is one of emotional immaturity masked by political correctness.
- Patrick’s Romantic Dilemma (Agustín vs. Kevin):
- First, there is Richie Donado (Raúl Castillo), a barber of Mexican descent. Through him, the series exposes the classism and elitism within the white gay bubble: Patrick's friends look down on him, and even Agustín (Frankie J. Alvarez), a Cuban artist with low height but immense intellectual arrogance, implicitly rejects him, arguing he is "not a good match" and criticizing cultural details like his scapular. Richie, maintaining his dignity, exiles himself after Patrick's subtle reluctance to take him to his sister's wedding.
- Then comes Kevin Matheson (Russell Tovey), Patrick's British boss. Kevin represents temptation: he is successful, sophisticated, and trapped in a monotonous relationship with a hyper-athletic boyfriend who counts his calories. The sexual tension evolves from a restrained kiss into a passionate, physically fulfilling (active) affair, breaking Patrick's shyness but complicating his workplace in The Castro—a neighborhood so small that secrets do not exist.
- Dom Basaluzzo (Murray Bartlett) and Lynn (Scott Bakula): Dom is the friend going through a midlife crisis at 40, professionally stagnant and dragging debts from the past. He tries to open a chicken restaurant (specializing in peri-peri chicken) and becomes emotionally and financially involved with Lynn, a mature floral entrepreneur. Lynn is played by Scott Bakula, the legendary 90s sci-fi television icon (Quantum Leap). His character evokes a nostalgic maturity, generosity, and the grief of an era where he saw entire circles of friends die from HIV. Their romance temporarily shifts to a trip to the Russian River region, a paradisiacal setting that evokes the free, pastoral magic of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream.
- Agustín and the Art Conceptual Underworld: The Cuban artist falls into a self-destructive spiral after criticizing his boss's work and losing his job. His identity crisis leads him to misuse ecstasy and involve his partner (an Afro-descendant social worker) in a murky art project. He hires Eddie (Daniel Franzese), a sex worker who charges $220 USD an hour, to film fetishes and encounters. This ethical transgression shatters his relationship and leaves him homeless, only to be rescued by the very community (Richie and Patrick) he used to look down upon.
Technical Aspects: Camera and Editing as Narrators
On a cinematographic level, Looking stands out for its subtlety. Under Andrew Haigh's direction, the handheld camera works as a voyeuristic observer: it doesn't judge; it accompanies. The lighting takes advantage of San Francisco's natural light—its foggy afternoons, its dim neon lights—steering clear of the hyper-stylized or plastic aesthetic of other productions from that era.
The editing maintains a slow, almost contemplative pace that mimics the flow of daily life. Cuts do not chase Hollywood cliffhangers, but rather the truth of an awkward silence, a deflected gaze, or a physical touch. The performances feature an overwhelming naturalism; the actors don't project to the gallery, they converse with an organic authenticity that makes the viewer feel like a roommate in that shared apartment.
Conclusion: The Value of Keeping Search
Looking was misunderstood during its original run because audiences were searching for the scandal of Queer as Folk or the glamour of Sex and the City. However, viewing it today reveals a work of emotional craftsmanship. It doesn't claim to be a grand moralizing epic, but rather an honest, bittersweet, and gripping mosaic of a community that, despite its own class and race flaws, protects and sustains one another. A television gem that lives up to its name: a constant search for identity, love, and belonging.
Rating: 4.5 / 5 stars.
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