Netflix’s The Platform has earned praise as the perfect film for the age of hoarding. But is it, really? In one of our most divided episodes of The Low Key Podcast, we go deep on whether the main metaphor in the film is too obvious, just right, or doesn’t quite work.
The Platform, directed by Galder Gaztelu-Urrutia, takes place in a multi-level prison where the inmates are fed via a platform that is initially filled with sumptuous dishes — which the inmates pick clean as the platform descends. Those in the lower cells get less and less, until they get nothing at all. Adding to the fun is the fact that the inmates are switched around, apparently at random, so that they are sometimes on good, high-level floors, and sometimes in the deeper ones, where starvation is a very likely fate.
I had big problems with The Platform. My co-hosts, Aaron Lanton and Keith Dennie, saw some merits. Overall, we got very philosophical in trying to decide how, if at all, The Platform relates to the way we live now.
You can listen on Apple or Spotify or right here:
https://shows.acast.com/low-key/episodes/the-platform-is-the-ultimate-covid-19-movie-or-is-it
Among the questions we consider are:
- Why some people have more than they need while others don’t have enough
- Whether any of us who are healthy and comfortable should be complaining about anything right now
- How much the world of The Platform resembles the United States, in terms of social mobility
- The ethics of getting food to-go
- Whether the film qualifies as what some critics used to call “torture porn”
If you enjoy this episode, we highly recommend checking out every episode of Low Key, and following us on Instagram at @thelowkeypod. You can also message us your thoughts there, and we’ll read them in a future episode.
Last episode we had fun talking about Uncorked, which is pretty much the opposite of The Platform.
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