Wednesday 13 January 2016

Mavericks: The Rules Were Not Made To Be Broken

Spoiler Warning - Major spoilers for The Shield, L.A. Confidential
Minor spoilers for House, Hot Fuzz

In one episode of House a mean hospital administrator guy tried to get House kicked out of the hospital. It was made clear with camera angles and emotive music that he was most definitely the bad guy. And before the hospital board he put forward his case - House was a drug addict, House not only broke ethical guidelines he broke the law, he refused to do things that were his job, he insulted other staff and patients and I quickly found myself agreeing with him; House should be fired. There were others on the board who tried to put forward a case for House, stating that he was singularly brilliant and did things no one else could do but they had a pretty weak case. Ultimately though House was impervious to this, because he was a maverick, and television loves mavericks. House is a genius who doesn't play by the rules! As with most jobs, but especially medicine, the rules are there for a very good reason and while people idolise mavericks on television I think most people would be uncomfortable if they had a maverick GP who didn't play by the rules.

Mavericks are a very common trope in films and television, they are exciting, unpredictable characters, who do things their real-life counterparts couldn't do (often this is for very good reasons). Many mavericks are abrasive and rude and have poor people skills, they have substance abuse problems and have problems dealing with authority, despite often working in areas with very rigid authority structures.  The Fast Show played with this trope with adverts for a new programme called Monkfish which constantly showed a tough, uncompromising, belligerent maverick who morphed from police officer to doctor to vet in each new version of the show

Medicine is a curious field to want mavericks, given the years they spend learning the rules and procedures, but it is a fictional phenomenon that extends to many other careers. The most obvious is with the police and just about every fictional police officer from Dirty Harry to DCI John Luther were a law unto themselves and their films and shows make the argument that as they are on the side of righteousness, it's okay to break the law.
  • Harry Callahan, Dirty Harry one of the earliest examples and often cited as the classic example of the maverick cop. The careful and considerate Sarah Lund, the main police officer in The Killing who doesn't even carry her gun is a million miles from Callahan, who goaded criminals into using their guns so he could kill them.
  • Bud White, L.A. Confidential, uses violence and intimidation to get what he considers justice and is then used by the corrupt police chief to beat up his criminal competitors.
  • Jimmy 'Popeye' Doyle, The French Connection, was far more dangerous to members of the public than many criminals by his insane car chases.

  • Gene Hunt, Life On Mars, the stereotypical 1970s policeman, very happy to frame people he doesn't like and no time for any woolly liberal ideas. Hunt is an odd case as he is only a maverick in  comparison with John Simm's modern Sam Tyler.
  • Axel Foley, Beverley Hills Cop, does not take police work at all seriously.
  • Martin Riggs, Lethal Weapon, a loose cannon with a deathwish.
  • Vic Mackay, The Shield, in the first episode he murdered in cold blood another police officer so his side business of being a drug kingpin wasn't uncovered.

Some of these films and shows do criticise the maverick cops - Vic Mackay in The Shield is shown as absolutely corrupt and every season he seems to get into even murkier water, Gene Hunt is the exemplar throwback to dodgy police officers of the past whose reckless ways lead to innocent people ending up in prison and Bud White's tendency to ignore the rules made him easy prey for  a manipulative superior.

Mavericks in the military seem to be rarer and often depictions of soldiers etc. punish the idea of a maverick, you wouldn't want to be the maverick in the training part of Full Metal Jacket. However, in Top Gun Tom Cruise's character had the call-sign of "Maverick" to really emphasis his unpredictable maverick credentials. I definitely don't want a maverick in charge of a multi-million dollar flying killing machine. If we're going to have flying killing machines at all then I want level headed unadventurous types at the controls. That said, virtually the entire cast of Top Gun shouldn't be allowed near weapons, so obsessed with proving their superiority over  others and treating the whole thing like a very fun game.

The completely unreliable pilots of Top Gun
I've never really identified with maverick characters as usually I could see why the rules existed. They are few and far between but I much prefer anti-mavericks, these are people who can follow rules, work in teams, have good manners but are also very good at their jobs. When an anti-maverick appears in fiction there dedication to  doing their job properly is made into an interesting character quirk, rather than what you would expect. There are two perfect examples of these anti-mavericks.  The first is my favourite fictional depiction of a police officer, Nicolas Angel played by Simon Pegg in Hot Fuzz and he is the quintessential anti-maverick.



 Angel was a brilliant police officer; intelligent, dedicated, incorruptible, who trained and studied hard, who understood both the letter and the intent of a law. He did his paperwork and he understood the importance of paperwork. He was not a maverick. He didn't break the rules. At one point in the film when giving a speech to schoolchildren he cited the importance of procedural correctness when enforcing the law. Angel was the perfect police officer. Angel's partner, Danny Butterman, was more interested in the over the top antics of maverick police officers in films like Bad Boys where any arrest those two actually made would be challenged by any lawyer for the litany of things they did wrong. In films police officers see themselves as being the one "who cleans the garbage off the streets" whereas Angel is commended for building positive links with the community. Best of all, Angel is a police officer who while trained to use guns, and has used them, does not like them. He is a very un-macho example of a police officer.

The other brilliant example of an anti-maverick is Amy Poehler's character Leslie Knope in Parks & Recreation. She actually had many of the same problems as Hot Fuzz's Nicolas Angel - fantastically good at her job, liked following the rules and struggled to coexist with colleagues who didn't share her level of commitment and brilliance. The idea of making Leslie brilliant at her job, and actually brilliant at most things she set her mind to, wasn't apparent at the beginning of the show and at first she was just weirdly obsessed about her job and her burgeoning greatness made the character make far more sense. It also changed Knope from somebody who could be pitied into someone who was impressive.

Sadly, I don't think my anti-mavericks will take off in quite the same way as their more rule averse colleagues as without the brilliant writers and actors behind Hot Fuzz and Parks and Recreation they could be a little boring.


Friday 1 January 2016

Review of the Year


Spoiler Warning - Star Wars: The Force Awakens - not really any spoilers but I do mention who plays one character and that might trouble some people.


So it's the end of the year and while I don't believe in New Year's Resolutions I do believe in making arbitrary decisions about what has been the best whatever of the year. By the way, when I say "of the year" I'm referring to stuff I discovered in 2015 as from a philosophical point of view I can't guarantee that any of this stuff actually existed before I experienced it.

Best Thing of the Year - including television, film, books, podcasts etc
Winner: Rick and Morty It has so much in it that would appeal to me; science, time travel, parallel universes, shockingly unsentimental and cynical characters and it is very, very funny. A line of dialogue has become my new personal motto:

"Nobody exists on purpose, nobody belongs anywhere, everybody's gonna die. Come watch TV"

This is not as bleak as it sounds and actually came as very welcome advice in the show. I don't believe that people exist on purpose or for a reason, I don't believe the universe has some grand purpose and, yes, we are all going to die and I was really happy to see this idea not presented as a nihilist gloomy philosophy but instead as a way to enjoy life.

Every episode is excellent but particular stand out episodes are Love Potion No. 9  (which explained why love potions are really not cool), Meseeks and Destroys (bringing the brilliant character of Mr. Meseeks into existence) and Total Rickall (featuring memory tampering alien parasites (a lot of episode titles are puns involving Rick's name)).

Left to Right: Morty, Rick, Beth & Summer having some quality family time


Person Who Exceeded Expectations 
Winner: Bob Odenkirk, twice.
Spin-offs and reunions have a bad track record. Spin offs usually have diminishing returns and most reunions are not worth it but Bob Odenkirk has appeared in one spinoff and one reunion and both were better than I thought they would be. The spinoff was Better Call Saul, with Odenkirk taking the Saul Goodman character from Breaking Bad and doing an origins story for him. In Better Call Saul the lawyer is still using his real name, James McGill (that Saul Goodman isn't his real was stated in Breaking Bad). At this point McGill was more or less still on the right side of the law and didn't want to get involved with drug dealers and criminals unless he was defending them in a court of law. Breaking Bad was one of the best tv shows ever made and to be honest I didn't expect much from Better Call Saul but it easily exceeded my expectations. The show has a different tone to Breaking Bad and had moments of real pathos - Mike Ehrmantraut's face-to-face with his daughter in law being particularly affecting.




The reunion was that Netflix had effectively reunited the Mr. Show team. Mr. Show was a HBO sketch show in the nineties starring Bob Odenkirk and David Cross - probably best known as Tobias in Arrested Development. Their nineties show was as weird and brilliant as a HBO sketch show should be and who knew if they would be able to recapture the essence of that show. But they did and it was as surreal and great as ever.

Person Who Can Seemingly Do No Wrong
Winner - Oscar Isaac
The winner is Oscar Isaac who in 2015 appeared in gritty crime thriller A Most Violent Year, mind-bending sci-fi film Ex Machina, the critically acclaimed HBO drama Show Me a Hero and topped it off with playing Poe Dameron in the new Star Wars film, so he hasn't had a bad year really.

Oscar Isaac posing for a calendar



Best Live Comedy
Winner: Jo Neary - Faceful of Issues

At the Edinburgh Festival I saw a number of excellent comedy shows but the best was Jo Neary. It's hard to describe Jo Neary's show, I suppose you'd call her a character comedian and in a show she might play numerous characters, like her previous show Jo Neary's Youth Club or just the one character as in this show. I first saw Jo Neary as part of Robin Ince's Nine Lessons and Carols For Godless People show where one time she played an extremely nervous and uncomfortable woman doing a talk on sex toys and another where she played a character who was straight out of Brief Encounter talking on the phone. Both were brilliant. In this show Neary adopted a very similar persona of a well-spoken, perhaps repressed middle-class woman but built up the character so it was far more than just a parody. The show was something like a variety show from a small village fete and of course everyone apart from Jo Neary's character has dropped out. From start to finish it was hilarious and sometimes oddly emotional and Jo Neary's character is surprisingly endearing and was as close to a perfect hour of comedy I have ever seen. Below is a preview of the Edinburgh show she performed which I am fairly sure she is fine with being available online.




Perfectly Tailored For Me Book Award:
Winner: Nick Harkaway - Angelmaker
I read The Gone Away World little while ago and really enjoyed it but it only partly prepared me for how amazing Angelmaker would be. It really does seem like Nick Harkaway scanned my brain to determine what would be the perfect book for me. The book has so many interesting ideas - from the organisation that praised the ideas of John Ruskin so much they devoted their lives to building unique beautiful items like submarines and trains, the spy organisation who during World War II recruited rebellious young women to be spies, to the idea of a doomsday device that relied on increasing the amount of truth in the world. It is wonderfully odd and entirely to my taste.

Surprise of the Year
Winner: American Horror Story

I have never been a huge fan of horror but I have been trying to work in this over the last couple of years watching The Exorcist, Rosemary's Baby, The Baba Dook and similar. I also tried giving American Horror Story a go. I had initially been intrigued by the way the show works; every season the setting and premise of the show changes, they keep the same actors but people play different parts.The first season is known as "Murder House" and focused on the various deaths and murders that have happened over the decades and the various malicious ghosts who occupy the house. The first time I tried to watch it I couldn't make it through the first episode but for whatever reason I tried again and while I still wasn't too keen on the first episode but the second turned things up to eleven and I really enjoyed it which was quite a surprise. The show  is absolutely bonkers and doesn't make much sense at times but it is very enjoyable and helped me watch more horror things. After much thought I am not going to watch the second season only because it is set in an asylum and I think it might genuinely terrify me.



The Thank God It Wasn't Awful Award
Winner: Star Wars: The Force Awakens
It is far too early for me to talk too much about Star Wars and I need to have some time to properly consider the film, but whatever else I enjoyed it immensely. No matter how many good things were appearing in the news and the great trailer part of me couldn't forget the awfulness of The Phantom Menace.

So that was a selection of stuff from 2015, things I'm looking forward to in 2016 include Quentin Tarantino's new film The Hateful Eight, the new West World tv show and Ben Wheatley's film High Rise.