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Archive for February, 2024

Nicole Kidman

“EXPATS”(Prime Video): The arrogance of Western culture gets toasted and roasted in “Expats,” a six-part miniseries about rich foreigners living lives of miserable affluence in modern-day Hong Kong.

Created by Lulu Wang, “Expats” is repellant to about the same degree as her “The Farewell” was warm and life-affirming. At least a half-dozen times while watching this series I turned to the Missus and asked aloud: “Are we supposed to like anybody in this show?”

Given that, why bother?  Well, because the damn thing has been so well acted, that’s why.

From its first episode one might conclude that “Expats” is a mystery waiting to be solved.

American couple Margaret and Clarke (Nicole Kidman, Brian Tee) reside in a posh mountaintop high-rise overlooking the city.  Both geographically and emotionally they seem to be above it all.

Except…they are each tormented in their own individual ways in the wake of a staggering loss. Months before their youngest child, Gus, was snatched off the street.

“Expats” isn’t about the search for Gus, whose fate is speculated on but never solved. Rather, Wang probes the mentality of rich white folk who live privileged existences in a foreign country.

It’s not pretty.

Among the various characters are Margaret and Clark’s neighbors, a spectacularly dysfunctional pair played by Soraya Blue and  Jack Huston.  There’s the young Korean American woman (Ji-young Yoo), a party girl who was supposed to be watching Gus when he vanished.

If the series was devoted only to these arrogant (inadvertent and otherwise) strangers in a strange land it would be rough going. 

Happily we also eavesdrop on the lives of Hong Kong teens (some of whom are risking prison by protesting  mainland Chinese governance of the city).  And the final episode spends time with the Filipino cooks, housekeepers and sitters who have left their own children behind to tend to the offspring of their wealthy employers.

Well made, but not exactly a heart warmer.

“MASTERS OF THE AIR” (Apple+):  More like “Masters of Cliche.”

My anticipation was high upon learning that the same folk who brought us the brilliant WWII miniseries “Band of Brothers” and “The Pacific” were turning their attention to the flyboys who carried out bombing missions over Europe.

The first couple of episodes of “Masters of the Air,” though, were borderline unwatchable. It was as if the writers had immersed themselves in every old movie ever made about the subject and were determined to copy them.  

This result was dialogue neck deep in creaky cliches. I wanted to throw something heavy at my TV.

The good news is that “Masters of the Air” gradually loses its aw-shucks Andy Hardy attitude and gets into the horrifying meat and potatoes of aerial combat. Once off the ground, the show becomes a gripping survival drama…terrifying, even.

One can only come away in awe of the kids (some of the pilots were still in their teens) who rode these thin metal tubes through skies filled with flying shrapnel, blasted away at German fighter planes, all the while freezing their asses off in unpressurized compartments. (I cannot imagine a more horrifying gig than manning a ball turret on the belly of one of these flying fortresses.)

As time goes by one cannot even be assured that lead characters played by the likes of Austin Butler (“Elvis”) and Callum Turner (“The Boys in the Boat”) will return from their ghastly missions.

(Three-fourths of U.S. airmen were killed, seriously injured or became POWs. Their average age of death was only 23.)

My advice: Start with Episode 3.  But brace yourself.

| Robert W. Butler

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“FOR ALL MANKIND”(Apple+):

Most of what we call science fiction is in fact science/fantasy.  But “For All Mankind” is sci-fi in its truest sense. The show, which recently dropped its fourth season, offers an minutely detailed alternative history of the space race.  

In this version the Soviets get to the moon first and the Americans must play catch-up. Communism more or less flourishes with a repressive regime in Moscow still railing against capitalism well into the 21st century.  Al Gore is elected President; so is a  woman—a closeted gay woman.

(“For All Mankind” sees women as key figures in the space program. One could almost call this feminist sci-fi.)

Meanwhile astronauts and scientists from all countries are working to explore the vastness of space, with international colonies established on the moon and Mars. Of course, our conflicts as human beings don’t magically go away when we relocate to distant planets. There are labor issues, rebellions, sabotage.

Basically the series explores where we might be now if only we hadn’t put space exploration on the back burner.

The special effects are utterly convincing and the science completely plausible.

I’m especially impressed at how well certain characters — an original NASA flyboy played by Joel Kinnaman, a genius engineer/supervisor played by Wrenn Schmidt — age over the course of several decades.

The series deals not only in space exploration but in the lives of its many characters.  There are failed marriages and affairs. Generational disputes. Political gamesmanship.

The has led some to complain that there’s too much soap gumming up the science. I must disagree…our humdrum human foibles do not evaporate just because we are confronted with the vastness of space.

Throughout, the series never abandons the idea of real science.  No laser guns, shape-shifting aliens or woo woo transcendentalism. Just people designing and making machines that reflect the real possibilities of our technology, imaginations and capacity to hope.

Naomi Watts, Tom Hollander

“FEUD: TRUMAN CAPOTE VS. THE SWANS” (Hulu):
For its second season (the first, in 2017, focused on the antipathy shared by Bette Davis and Joan Crawford during the filming of “Whatever Happened to Baby Jane?”) Ryan Murphy’s “Feud” concentrates on writer/raconteur Truman Capote.

Set in the 1960s and ‘70s, “Capote and the Swans” delves into the novelist’s relationships with a half dozen or so society wives, women married to powerful movers and shakers who, from the outside anyway, appeared to live lives of pampered opulence and studied hautiness.

Capote (portrayed by Brit Tom Hollander with a helium-and-molasses voice and fierce attention to his character’s fey mannerisms) calls his gal pals “the swans” because, he says, they seem so graceful on the surface, while below the water line they are desperately paddling. 

These ladies who lunch are portrayed by the likes of Naomi Watts, Diane Lane, Chloe Sevigny, Calista Flockhart and Demi Moore — all of whom appear to be having one hell of a good time mining the bitchiness.

Not that it’s all fun and games. For all their affluence these women are fairly miserable, saddled with philandering hubbies and thankless children.  The openly gay Capote becomes their best friend, shrink, confidant and shoulder to cry on.

“I play the part. It’s all a performance,:” he admits in an unusually honest moment. “They pick men who are rich but cannot act.”

Of course Capote —his creative juices dried up — also betrays these women by turning his intimate knowledge of them into a scandalous novel…thus the feud of the title.

Now I’m only halfway trough the season, but the fourth episode, “Masquerade 1966,” is so freaking good — and so beautifully sums up what the series is about — that it’s practically a stand-alone experience.

John Robin Baitz (who has scripted the entire series) has come up with a brilliant idea. He tells the story of Capote’s famous Black-and-White Masked Ball (one of the most memorable if overhyped society events in Manhattan history) by using “found footage” reputedly made by documentary giants Albert and David Maysles.

The entire episode — directed by the great Gus Van Sant — is shot with handheld cameras and captured in grainy black-and-white and in a classic square frame. The Maysles Brothers not only observe the preparations with fly-on-the-wall intimacy, but conduct interviews Capote and with the Swans…each of whom is convinced that she will be the secret guest of honor to be named at the big event.

Clearly, they can’t all be queen for a day, but master manipulator Capote knows how to exploit each woman’s insecurities and desires to his will.

The result is 60 minutes of absolutely brilliant television.  

| Robert W. Butler

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