Nicholas
Reid reflects in essay form on general matters and ideas related to
literature, history, popular culture and the arts, or just life in general. You are free to agree
or disagree with him.
WHICH
IS THE PSYCHOPATH?
I know as well as you do that there is no such
thing as an “innocent” text, and that any novel, play, poem, film or TV series
carries a freight of ideas that, at their crudest level, could be called
propaganda. This is true of pop fiction, genre fiction and pulp fiction as much
as of works of High Art. But it is rare to see a genre TV show push its ideas
as hard as a recent cop show I saw.
On Netflix, we
watched the first two series (that is, eleven episodes) of the British-Irish
co-production The Fall. Filmed in
Belfast, the series has American actress Gillian Anderson as English Police
Superintendent Stella Gibson, called in to find a serial killer who has a fetish
about killing dark-haired professional women. This is not a whodunit, as we
know from the start that the guilty party is one Paul Spector, a rather creepy,
solemn-faced grief counsellor played by Jamie Dornan. While Gillian Anderson
does a good, if tonally monotonous, English accent, her acting range is
extremely limited and her face a blank. Jamie Dorman has one expression
throughout – furrow-browed, fixed concentration, which we can take as meaning
either evil genius or schizophrenia. Frankly, they are not the most nuanced of
characters.
We watched the
two series with considerable failure to suspend disbelief. So often, the serial
killer was nearly caught, but got away once again; and even when he is at last
identified by the police, it takes them an awfully long time to arrest him.
Much of this looked like padding to spin out a four- or five-episode idea into
eleven episodes. The series was aired in Britain in 2013 and 2014, and
apparently viewers had to wait a whole year between series to find out how it
turned out. Watching it on Netflix, we had no such wait. Even so, it was
tiresome hoping it would at last get to the point.
But it is not
the show’s aesthetic inadequacies that bring me to comment on The Fall. It is the fact that the
series’ creator and writer Allan Cubitt pushed so hard at a sexual agenda,
amounting at times to direct preaching to the audience.
Of course half
the attraction of a show like this is its sheer kinkiness. If you are making a
show about a serial killer who stalks women, murders them, and then poses their
naked bodies so that he can photograph them as trophies, then obviously your
lingering camera is inviting the audience to enjoy this sort of thing. It is
not mere documentation. It is conditioned spectacle. To stir the pot further, The Fall has a subplot of a violent
wife-beater, a walk-on part for an (imprisoned) paedophile priest, and a 15-year-old
girl who becomes sexually excited by the exploits of the serial killer and
teams up with him.
More kinkiness.
But (and here
comes the agenda, folks), Allan Cubitt presents his serial killer as being –
outside his night-time life of murder – a married man who, as far as the rest
of the world knows, is a devoted husband and father.
Meanwhile,
Superintendent Stella Gibson has her own sexual appetites. Early in the first
series, her eyes fall on a younger police officer, she invites him up to her
hotel room and spends the night bonking with him. The day after this one-night
stand, the younger officer is shot dead in front of his family, leaving a
grieving widow. When the younger officer’s movements are examined, Stella
Gibson’s one-night stand becomes known to her police team. One of them takes
her to task for her behaviour. She (i.e. the scriptwriter) proceeds to lecture
him (i.e. us, the audience) that patriarchal men have one-night stands all the
time, so her colleagues are berating her only because she is a woman exercising
her sexual freedom. She shows no reaction to the fact that the man she slept
with is now dead. It has nothing to do with her and her free choices. Later, in
the second series, she brings another junior officer to her bed. She also has a
lesbian cuddle with a female colleague, although in this case the other woman
turns her down.
Often as I
watched this emotionless woman work through various sexual partners for her
entertainment, I wondered whether she, rather than the serial killer, was the
real psychopath.
Ah yes, but then
some sort of comparison was exactly what Allan Cubitt wanted. The serial killer
is on the surface a domesticated married man…. but see what evil lies beneath!!
You can’t trust these married-with-kids types can you?
Are you
disgusted by the woman who bonks around dispassionately? Well aren’t you a
judgmental conservative person. Why. you’re probably the type who would limit a
grown woman’s sexual choices.
This, I think,
is the type of propaganda the show is selling.
I can’t be too
worried about it, however, as a little research shows that the show gradually
lost its audience. Probably most were turned off by the slowness of the series’
narrative and its failure to go anywhere.
I note with
amusement that a third series (which I have not seen) was made in 2015 and
aired in Britain in 2016. The Guardian
produced a scathing article about it. At the end of the second series, the
stalking serial killer Paul Spector is absolutely and definitely shot dead. We
see him lying motionless with blood splattered all over him. But apparently in
the third series, he was brought back to life so that he could have another
battle of wits with the woman cop. This (plus even more slow-moving episodes)
was too much for most viewers and the negative reviews poured in.
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