I have been following a few of the newer series as they come
up and thinking about their appeal. I am
aware that the desired demographic of most series at this point includes an appreciation
for sex, violence and blowing stuff up. In
fact, I was raised on war movies which were pretty violent, though usually
without the sex. And one of my favorite
films of all time is Platoon. So it
is isn’t that I dislike any of the above things per se. The problem I am
having is that somehow the storytelling is being sacrificed to mere sex,
violence, and blowing stuff up; the more graphic and appalling they are, the
better.
Some shows have succeeded in presenting at least one
character with whom we can identify, or for whom we can cheer. Too many of the newer ones have failed in
that regard.
I have tried to watch Salem,
for example. I have no problem with
throwing out the history and making witches real. The irritating thing is that there is so much
hatred of women in the writing that I can’t find a woman to root for, and most
of the men are boring and/or despicable.
I kept hoping that one of these powerful witches would pull
out all the stops and just blast someone to smithereens, or that one of those
who so hated and feared these women would just start killing them outright,
without the pretense of religion. Not worthy of me as a nun, I suppose, but my
Dad was a Marine. I can appreciate
decisive action. If, on the other hand,
they were trying to be complex and subtle, I totally missed the subtext.
The show somehow falls perilously close to satire, as if
making fun of fear of powerful women, while reinforcing it at the same
time. It is excruciating to see fine
actors and glorious production values wasted in this manner. I have seen many of these same actors in
other shows, and they are quite good.
They seem to be struggling to present an ensemble show, which is a plus.
But even the one who seems to be meant
to be the hero, John Alden, a good actor in Nikita,
fails to engage my interest.
I found myself thinking that it’s as if someone decided to
take Arthur Miller’s The Crucible and
satirize it. (Which creates a real
cognitive dissonance when you remember that it was a political response to
McCarthyism.) Then just to add
originality, they decided to make the witches real, show off some cool special
effects and throw in the elements of a teen angst drama played by adults. Adults can’t really pull that off.
I don’t have ADHD, but after two episodes I was becoming
increasingly curious about a book or two I am in the middle of, and just plain
bored with Salem’s not-quite tragic
leading lady, et al. I hope the show
finds its footing, but I believe I will not be watching.
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