TV hit Yellowjackets is a thrilling, chilling tale of female survivalism - Action News
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Entertainment

TV hit Yellowjackets is a thrilling, chilling tale of female survivalism

The Showtime series tells the story of a high school girls' soccer team that is stranded in the Ontario wilderness after a plane crash, offering a brutal look at what teen girls might do to survive under desperate circumstances.

Canadian star says show's dark examination of femininity was part of the appeal

In the new Showtime series Yellowjackets, about a group of girls who end up stranded in the Ontario wilderness, Sophie Nlisse, far right, plays Shauna. Nlisse told CBC News she loves how the show embraces the 'dark sides' of women. (Kailey Schwerman/Showtime)

Not many hit TV shows are inspired by the comments section of news articles.

Showtime's Yellowjackets was conceived in 2017 when its creator saw that an all-girls remake ofLord of the Flieswas being roundly mocked on the internet, with many doubting that girls would devolve into barbarism like the schoolboy characters of William Golding's 1954 novel.

The newseries a kind of cross between the aforementioned book and the popular ABC show Lost tells the story of an all-girls high school soccer team from New Jersey whose plane crashes en route to their national championships, leaving the survivors stranded in the Ontario wilderness for 19 months.

Their slow descent intomadness which is hinted at in the pilot episode's gruesome first scene shows that not everyone will starve, but many won't make it out alive. With its ensemble cast of female stars, Yellowjackets offers a refreshing look at what a woman-led society might look like, and it's probably not the utopia you were expecting.

For Yellowjackets star Sophie Nlisse, who was born in Windsor, Ont., the story's dark examination of femininity was part of the appeal. Nlisse plays Shauna, a shy teenager overshadowed by her charming best friend, Jackie.

"I love that it embraces the darker sides and the not-so-pretty sides [of] women," said Nlisse, who was raised in Montreal. "We're always supposed to be put in this box where we're pretty and we're nice and kind, but we can be sort of assholes, too, you know and that's OK, because we're human."

WATCH |CanadianYellowjacketsstar tells CBC News about her lead role:

Canadian actor Sophie Nlisse discusses her leading role in Yellowjackets

3 years ago
Duration 1:32
Sophie Nlisse, the star of Showtime series Yellowjackets, discusses fan theories, how much she knows about season 2, and what it was like to collaborate with actor Melanie Lynskey.

The show, which wraps its first season on Sunday, subverts stereotypical ideas of what women are capable of, because gender "falls to the wayside" in a society where people have to perform labour equally in the name of survival, said Roxana Hadadi, a TV critic at the U.S. pop culture site Vulture.

"I think that the show does a very good job pushing back against this idea of, you know, 'If all women got together, then everything would just be fine,' by showing us honestly how infantilizing that argument can be," saidHadadi.

Split timeline shows 2 sides of womanhood

Hadadi said part of why Yellowjackets succeeds in thisis because it is split into two timelines. Out in the wilderness, without the rigid social constructs of modern society, the girls are simply human beings trying to survive.

Nlisse, who was born in Windsor, Ont., and raised in Montreal, plays the teenager Shauna. After the crash, Shauna struggles to keep a dark secret from her best friend, Jackie. (Paul Sarkis/Showtime)

When we catch up with them as adults, they've fallen in line with conventional ideas of what a woman should be,which they find unsatisfying.

The first timeline, set in 1996, covers the year and a half the girls spent in the wilderness. Here, the show teeters between psychological mindbender and survivalist horror we don't know if the more far-fetched elements hint at supernatural forces or are a symptom of the girls' insanity.

The second timeline takes place in 2021, as the 25th anniversary of the crash looms over four known survivors: Shauna (Melanie Lynskey), Taissa(Tawny Cypress), Natalie (Juliette Lewis) and Misty (Christina Ricci).Each of themhas repressed their bleak history and rebuilt their lives, withvaryingshades of success.

Melanie Lynskey plays the adult version of Shauna in Yellowjackets. 25 years after the plane crash, Shauna struggles to repress the traumatic memories and behaviours from her time in the wilderness.
Melanie Lynskey plays the adult version of Shauna. Twenty-five years after the crash, Shauna struggles to repress the traumatic memories and behaviour from her time in the wilderness. (Kailey Schwerman/Showtime)

If others came out of the initial ordeal alive, we haven't discovered it yet.

"We starved, scavenged and prayed for 19 months" that's the survivors' official line, for anyone who asks. But they soondiscover they're being blackmailed by an unknown individual who isthreatening to tell the world what really happened in the woods.

The women reluctantly band together again to protect the truth.

Surviving high school hierarchies

The show's creators have a five-season vision,whichwill presumably end with the team's rescue.

As brutal as the series has set itself up to be,Yellowjackets is equally committed to the interior lives of its female ensemble, demonstrating how the social hierarchy of high school is itself something to be survived.

The teen ensemble of Yellowjackets gather in an abandoned cabin to perform a sance. Nelisse said the girls show their true colours as they fight for survival in the wilderness. (Kailey Schwerman/Showtime)

After the crash in the woods, it's not a stretch to figure out which characters will cling to the pecking order (queen bee Jackie squeals at the sight of a dead animal, for example) and who will be more than happy to abandon it (certified loner Misty, who is treated like a pest until she breaks out her Girl Scout skills). The fact that the head coach's teenage son is among the few male survivors also spells trouble.

But something has to replace the disrupted hierarchy, Hadadi said.

"It's sort of that thing you see in Lord of the Flies: if hierarchy is gone, then what new patterns or behaviours do you create for yourselves to re-establish some kind of order?"

Intense following

Fans of the show are propelled by the suspense of that question, and have taken to Reddit, Twitter and TikTok to share their own theories about the story's trajectory.

That the series has aired using a weekly storytelling model and not the binge format has helped generate conversation, Hadadisaid.

What we do know is that many of the Yellowjackets girls have dark sides that are forced out by the desperation of their circumstances, which Nlisse compares to having a second personality.

"The only thing you know you have to deal with is your true self and your values," she said.

"I think Shauna is sort of scared, almost, of this other person. It's like she doesn't like this version of her, but it still needs to come out at some point."