Get the latest tech news

Netflix’s The Kitchen is a stunning parable about the future of housing inequality


Netflix’s new action drama from co-directors Daniel Kaluuya and Kibwe Tavares is an instant sci-fi classic.

After years of public housing across the United Kingdom being bought up by private companies and transformed into expensive luxury flats for the wealthy, the Kitchen — a towering, dilapidated apartment complex long-scheduled for demolition — is the only place in London where people like Isaac (rapper Kane “Kano” Robinson) can really afford to live. But the film’s script from Kaluuya and co-writers Rob Hayes and Joe Murtagh and its focus on young Londoners navigating the complexities of near homelessness makes The Kitchen read like a scathing reflection of the long-term devastating impacts of the UK’s Margaret Thatcher-era right-to-buy policies. The Kitchen presents its namesake as a cramped Kowloon-like mosaic of barely livable spaces packed with outdated technology that contrasts sharply with the spacious neighborhoods nearby, where gleaming driverless cars idle by luxury boutiques.

Get the Android app

Or read this on The Verge

Read more on:

Photo of Netflix

Netflix

Photo of kitchen

kitchen

Photo of future

future

Related news:

News photo

Apple Vision Pro: YouTube, Spotify and Netflix take stance on headset

News photo

After Netflix says no, other app makers debate a Vision Pro launch

News photo

Netflix, YouTube, and Spotify snub Apple's vision of VR