Succession
Oct. 23rd, 2019 11:59 am![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
"Look, here’s the thing about being rich, it’s like being a superhero, only better. You get to do what you want. The authorities can’t really touch you. You get to wear a costume, but it’s designed by Armani and it doesn’t make you look like a prick."
Anyone else watching Succession? I caught up with it in time for the season 2 finale, and I'm... both blown away and torn?
For those who don't know it, Succession is essentially what would happen if you were to set The Godfather in the Rupert Murdoch empire; old patriarch of right-wing media conglomerate (Brian Cox!) starts to show his age and his deeply dysfunctional family start jockeying for position and stabbing each other in the back in the name of Family.
Now, it's an incredibly well-made series with great character work and that sort of plot that you barely even notice until you need to - by which I mean it's incredibly tightly plotted but only rarely feels like the plot was written, if that makes sense. You start from a bunch of fucked-up people and let them make choices that just dig them deeper into a hole. It's funny, but rarely ha-ha funny.
And I mean, it's not like it doesn't resonate today. Both because the TV network they run is a very thinly disguised FOX News (which doesn't get as much room in the series as maybe I'd like, but I guess we're meant to know it anyway and it's not like we need a second The Newsroom), and because focusing on a bunch of rich (and we're talking VERY rich) inbred idiots who get to run the world because of nepotism, cluelessness and ruthlessness (running gag: "NRPI - No Real Person Involved") certainly feels like 2019.
At the same time... I'm so very very very very very very sick of villain protagonists whose major redeeming quality is that they sometimes fail and cry in their private jet. As well-made as it is, and as good as the character drama is, it bugs me that this sort of jerk!billionaire!porn will inevitably (cf Handmaid's Tale-themed weddings, etc) serve to, in some way, glamourize it even further. And the cynic in me isn't sure that's not the point. I was going to say this is one of the few series on TV right now that's not about superheroes and villains, but after thinking about it (and remembering that opening quote) I'm not sure that's true; we're very fond right now of stories about how extraordinary people are almost like real people. Except they get to be bulletproof - and in the case of "realistic" shows like this one, never have to actually fight a hero with "justice" emblazoned on his chest. Aspire to that, couch potatoes.
"And you will get properly 'Fuck you, I don't even care about climate change, I'm in New Zealand with my own private army' rich. Not like some pathetic asshole Beach-house-on-the-Vineyard rich."
...Eh. Thank fork there's The Good Place and Gideon The Ninth to balance it out.
Anyone else watching Succession? I caught up with it in time for the season 2 finale, and I'm... both blown away and torn?
For those who don't know it, Succession is essentially what would happen if you were to set The Godfather in the Rupert Murdoch empire; old patriarch of right-wing media conglomerate (Brian Cox!) starts to show his age and his deeply dysfunctional family start jockeying for position and stabbing each other in the back in the name of Family.
Now, it's an incredibly well-made series with great character work and that sort of plot that you barely even notice until you need to - by which I mean it's incredibly tightly plotted but only rarely feels like the plot was written, if that makes sense. You start from a bunch of fucked-up people and let them make choices that just dig them deeper into a hole. It's funny, but rarely ha-ha funny.
And I mean, it's not like it doesn't resonate today. Both because the TV network they run is a very thinly disguised FOX News (which doesn't get as much room in the series as maybe I'd like, but I guess we're meant to know it anyway and it's not like we need a second The Newsroom), and because focusing on a bunch of rich (and we're talking VERY rich) inbred idiots who get to run the world because of nepotism, cluelessness and ruthlessness (running gag: "NRPI - No Real Person Involved") certainly feels like 2019.
At the same time... I'm so very very very very very very sick of villain protagonists whose major redeeming quality is that they sometimes fail and cry in their private jet. As well-made as it is, and as good as the character drama is, it bugs me that this sort of jerk!billionaire!porn will inevitably (cf Handmaid's Tale-themed weddings, etc) serve to, in some way, glamourize it even further. And the cynic in me isn't sure that's not the point. I was going to say this is one of the few series on TV right now that's not about superheroes and villains, but after thinking about it (and remembering that opening quote) I'm not sure that's true; we're very fond right now of stories about how extraordinary people are almost like real people. Except they get to be bulletproof - and in the case of "realistic" shows like this one, never have to actually fight a hero with "justice" emblazoned on his chest. Aspire to that, couch potatoes.
"And you will get properly 'Fuck you, I don't even care about climate change, I'm in New Zealand with my own private army' rich. Not like some pathetic asshole Beach-house-on-the-Vineyard rich."
...Eh. Thank fork there's The Good Place and Gideon The Ninth to balance it out.