Appie Boudellah and Aram van de Relaxation direct F*ck Love Too (F*ck de Liefde 2), a Dutch-language Netflix original rom-com. A group of associates is caught in a tornado of choices centered on love in this sequel that bears no resemblance to the first film. Dumped your boyfriend and moved on to a former flame? Leave your hubby at home and strike off on your own? Should you marry if you’re not sure you’re ready? Stick with your child’s father, who recently divorced your old best friend and is also the father of your new friend’s child?

It’s all too much to keep track of that no one’s names are remembered, save from the main character Bo (Yolanthe Cabau), the one with the former flame, and the principal male who completely stinks, Jack (Edwin Jonker).

image credit: youtube

That is supposed to be a film about second chances in relationships and love. It’s so crowded with completely unconnected storylines that overlap that I couldn’t bear it for almost the entire runtime. However, in the spirit of giving it a second chance, it at least improved collectively in the final act to be much less horrifying. I can’t recommend investing your time watching F*ck Love Too, but if you’re looking for a bad rom-com, there are far worse options.

First and foremost, it’s absolutely dull. The characters are completely unremarkable and uninteresting. There’s no physical or emotional spark between any of them, and I couldn’t bring myself to root for any of them, let alone the victims of Jack’s impropriety. And not because I cared about them as people; they’re just as uninteresting as everyone else and don’t even pique my attention by supporting each other in any serious way. They’re simply victims of bad writing and a bad man, so it’s the only place my heart was invested in the picture.

F*ck Love Too
image credit: youtube

It doesn’t help that it’s full of subtly racist exchanges, anti-sex employee sentiment, and sexism disguised as humor. Even though there are essentially no other non-white characters in the film, there appears to be a fetishization or at least tokenization of the boys of color who make up a significant percentage of the film’s love quests. Furthermore, there is a whole Roma appropriation scenario that serves no use in furthering the plot or characters.

A complete subplot revolves around a male escort one of many characters hires for an additional without her knowledge or consent and devolves into a state of affairs where his work is being shamed and comes round to shaming himself and implying that the only method to be associated is to stop intercourse work and get a real job.

F*ck Love Too
image credit: paudal

And Jack is simply being sexist and making sexist comments for fun, intending to be absolved when he allegedly comes around and redeems himself by the tip. It’s merely several really nasty qualities in the screenplay of this picture that make an already thin-film much thinner.

The music in this picture can also be rather irritating. For one thing, it keeps repeating the same music, and when it isn’t, it’s just thumping dance music that doesn’t complement the low-key tone of many of the moments or the lovely landscape the film is situated in.

F*ck Love Too
image credit: youtube

The males all wear identical pairs of pants in completely different colors, and there are the identical two crops, a hen of paradise and a monstera, that keep appearing in the backgrounds of several situations. It was obvious and felt reasonably priced. Even though they were, in fact, completely separate crops, it appeared as though the prop division only did one motif and set.

F*ck Love Too isn’t the worst rom-com it could be, and the finale is fine, but it’s unquestionably the worst offering Netflix has released in May, and it’s unsuitable for advice. The annoying, often insulting prose doesn’t help its shallow and uninspired characters and romances.

F*ck Love Too
image credit: youtube

F*ck Love Too isn’t the worst rom-com it could be, and the finale is fine, but it’s unquestionably the worst offering Netflix has released in May, and it’s unsuitable for advice. The annoying, often insulting prose doesn’t help its shallow and uninspired characters and romances. 

Popular culture is cool, but have you ever attempted to evaluate it through a historical and cultural prism to not just comprehend the subject material more deeply? When Jason isn’t changing the podcast or pondering the effects of media on our lives, I’m off developing sustainable cooking skills. 

Filming Locations for F*ck Love Too 

‘F*ck Love Too’ was mostly shot in Spain’s Balearic Islands, notably on the island of Ibiza, where the plot is situated. The Balearic Islands are a Spanish archipelago that serves as an autonomous community as well as a province of Spain.

F*ck Love Too
image credit: rogersmovienation

Mallorca, Menorca, Ibiza, and Formentera are the four major islands in the Balearic Sea. The film’s principal photography appears to have taken place in September 2021. Now, let’s walk around the island and look at all of the precise places used in the film!

 

Spain’s Ibiza 

The majority of the film was shot on location in Ibiza, the third largest of the Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean Sea.

The production crew used the island’s reputation as an international party destination to represent the general atmosphere of the narrative. The cast and crew pitched up camp on the beach at Cala Nova to film various scenes. Atzaró Beach, one of Ibiza’s greatest beach restaurants, is located on this sparkling beach. The restaurant was also employed as a key filming site for a couple of sequences by the production team.

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In addition, the cast and crew of ‘F*ck Love Too’ headed to Cala Tarida, a beach resort on Ibiza’s western seaboard, to film extra scenes. They were also spotted filming a lot of sequences in the Marble Stella Maris Ibiza Hotel in September 2021. The hotel is located in the municipality of Sant Antoni de Portmany in Ibiza and is surrounded by lush gardens and pine trees, providing its guests with a one-of-a-kind setting.

F*ck Love Too
image credit: youtube

Ibiza is a popular filming location for numerous filmmakers due to its picturesque and unusual scenery. Indeed, the Spanish island has appeared in a variety of films and television shows throughout the years, including ‘White Lines,’ ‘Ibiza,’ ‘Amnesia,’ ‘Paradise Island,’ and ‘Inventing Anna.’

F*ck Love Too is now available on Netflix.