Close Menu
Iamluxury.clubIamluxury.club

    Join the Inner Circle

    Get exclusive access to the world’s most expensive, rare, and luxurious experiences.
    From billionaire lifestyles to once-in-a-lifetime discoveries — delivered directly to you.

    What's Hot

    Style And Status: The Psychology Behind Luxury Brand Allure

    Think Musk the billionaire was bad? Brace yourself for Musk the trillionaire | Arwa Mahdawi

    The quiet luxury of frictionless online payments: Why convenience now shapes digital leisure

    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest
    Iamluxury.clubIamluxury.club
    Watch Luxury
    • Most Expensive
    • Billionaires & Rich
    • Luxury Lifestyle
    • Rare & Unique
    • Luxury News
    Iamluxury.clubIamluxury.club
    You are at:Home»Luxury Lifestyle»An Honest Life Review: Terribly Dishonest About Itself
    Luxury Lifestyle

    An Honest Life Review: Terribly Dishonest About Itself

    m1ifkBy m1ifkMay 18, 2026004 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    An Honest Life Review: Terribly Dishonest About Itself
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Netflix-original Swedish-language thriller, An Honest Life (Ett ärligt liv), is a terribly severe, unfun “tear down the system” movie that seems to wish you wouldn’t, actually. Simon (Simon Lööf), a law student without wealthy parents, moves in with uber-wealthy classmates who treat him like a servant. When he has a chance encounter with Max (Nora Rios), Simon falls in with her ring of anarchist burglars in a mess of a movie that neither scintillates nor makes a political point.

    The movie opens in media res, with Simon at a watch shop, a woman dropping to the floor from a seizure, and a burner phone ringing to tell him to take the watches, because this is his test. It takes an hour before it’s clear what he’s being tested for, and by the time you find out, it hardly feels worth it.

    The next thing that happens is that Simon gets caught up in a violent protest while walking home. Police mistake him for a rioter, he runs, they chase, and when he’s nearly free, he sees the cops about to attack masked vandals and shouts to warn them.

    An Honest Life seems not to understand its own politics.

    Apparently, this warning is enough to convince those vandals, ultimately Max and her group, that Simon has some potential to become one of them. This, even though he is clearly a stoic, scared kid who has expressed no real political or moral beliefs throughout the movie, besides that rich people are obnoxious and attacking people with violence makes him uncomfortable.

    There is no reason to believe that Simon is a fully-formed character. His only defining trait is that he wanted to be a writer, not a lawyer, but he never had anything exciting enough happen to him, so he gave up on writing outside of his personal diary, which is used occasionally as a narrative device for Simon to give voiceover. He’s not insightful or interesting; he’s just telling things as they are.

    Max and her crew, on the other hand, have no clear motivations besides vague family trauma and a gripe against the rich. Sure, those are sympathetic descriptors, but An Honest Life does everything it can to strip them of that sympathy. They’re mean, manipulative, and constantly lying to Simon. There’s nothing ultimately likable about them, which unfortunately, actually seems to be the point.

    The visuals and tone of An Honest Life are so dark and disinteresting.

    An Honest Life Simon and Max

    An Honest Life clearly hates leftists more than it hates the rich people they’re revolting against. The crummy rich roommates turn out to be more sympathetic than the people Simon falls in with. It’s an offensive caricature of protest and leftism. And yet, the movie still tries to get you to buy into a star-crossed romance between Max and Simon. It’s more manipulative than the criminals depicted in An Honest Life.

    To make matters worse, the tone and visuals of the movie match its disinterest. Simon always looks and sounds like he’s miserable, probably because he is. But it’s deeply uninteresting to watch. The movie is ostensibly a crime thriller, yet none of the crimes are fun to watch. There’s no energy anywhere in this movie. And like most Netflix thrillers caked in severity, An Honest Life is visually dark and uninteresting to look at.

    An Honest Life is not honest with itself about its own politics. It’s an anti-leftist tome masquerading inside a trite anti-rich misfire. It’s not fun to watch in its own right, but the fact that none of its characters are redeemable, despite the movie’s intentions, makes this a must-skip.

    An Honest Life is streaming now on Netflix.

    An Honest Life

    3.5/10

    TL;DR

    An Honest Life is not honest with itself about its own politics. It’s an anti-leftist tome masquerading inside a trite anti-rich misfire.

    Dishonest Honest Life Review Terribly
    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleThe most expensive guitars of all time
    Next Article From selling pineapples by roadside to building fortune in Hong Kong: the rise of Malaysia-born billionaire Cheah Cheng Hye
    admin
    m1ifk
    • Website

    Related Posts

    The quiet luxury of frictionless online payments: Why convenience now shapes digital leisure

    June 10, 2026

    High Net-Worth Life Insurance

    June 9, 2026

    Why Quiet Luxury Brands Win the Hamptons (And What the Loud Ones Get Wrong)

    June 9, 2026
    Add A Comment
    Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

    Top Posts

    Restaurant Review: Robin’s Ramen, Holland Park Avenue in London

    April 26, 20265 Views

    Forbes Billionaires List 2026: The Biggest Movers, New Entries, and Where Australia’s Richest Rank

    June 1, 20264 Views

    Richest Man in the World May 2026: Top 10 Wealthiest People & Their Net Worth

    May 26, 20264 Views
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • YouTube
    • TikTok
    • WhatsApp
    • Twitter
    • Instagram

    Join the Inner Circle

    Get exclusive access to the world’s most expensive, rare, and luxurious experiences.
    From billionaire lifestyles to once-in-a-lifetime discoveries — delivered directly to you.

    Most Popular

    Restaurant Review: Robin’s Ramen, Holland Park Avenue in London

    April 26, 20265 Views

    Forbes Billionaires List 2026: The Biggest Movers, New Entries, and Where Australia’s Richest Rank

    June 1, 20264 Views

    Aryna Sabalenka and Georgios Frangulis combined net worth in 2026: Inside the couple’s earnings, endorsements, investments, and luxury lifestyle | International Sports News

    June 6, 20263 Views
    Our Picks

    You could be earning thousands of dollars #entreprenuer #motivationspeech #motivationalquotes

    BMW’s new 7 Series goes big on tech, luxury, range and grille

    Here’s the Most Expensive Version of Everything

    Join the Inner Circle

    Get exclusive access to the world’s most expensive, rare, and luxurious experiences.
    From billionaire lifestyles to once-in-a-lifetime discoveries — delivered directly to you.

    © 2026 aimluxury.club All rights reserved.
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    • Disclaimer

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.