House of Cards, the American made-for/by-Netflix remake, is actually quite good. The original British version with Ian Richardson is probably better, if a bit dated by its post-Thatcherist setting.
In a nutshell, Kevin Spacey plays Francis Underwood, the majority Democratic whip in an alternate reality where the Democrats won 2008 with someone other than Obama. After re-election, Frank is passed over for Secretary of State, and then starts using his connections to bring down the administration. There’s a lot of sex, drugs, violence, backstabbing, and political intrigue.
Some of the critics I’ve read are annoyed with the bluntness of the action and the occasional weakness of the writing. On the other hand, because it was written for the Netflix format, all of the first season is available at once, and each episode can be as long as it needs to be. There aren’t any commercials, so what you get is a smooth, continuous plot from start to stop. The series’ running gag is that Francis breaks the fourth wall on a rather frequent basis, so you’d have to like Deadpool-esque main characters, too.
My main concern (I’m only two episodes in) is how the politics of England (which were kind of necessary to fill out the plot of the UK series) are going to translate to politics in the US version.
House of Cards, the American made-for/by-Netflix remake, is actually quite good. The original British version with Ian Richardson is probably better, if a bit dated by its post-Thatcherist setting.
In a nutshell, Kevin Spacey plays Francis Underwood, the majority Democratic whip in an alternate reality where the Democrats won 2008 with someone other than Obama. After re-election, Frank is passed over for Secretary of State, and then starts using his connections to bring down the administration. There’s a lot of sex, drugs, violence, backstabbing, and political intrigue.
Some of the critics I’ve read are annoyed with the bluntness of the action and the occasional weakness of the writing. On the other hand, because it was written for the Netflix format, all of the first season is available at once, and each episode can be as long as it needs to be. There aren’t any commercials, so what you get is a smooth, continuous plot from start to stop. The series’ running gag is that Francis breaks the fourth wall on a rather frequent basis, so you’d have to like Deadpool-esque main characters, too.
My main concern (I’m only two episodes in) is how the politics of England (which were kind of necessary to fill out the plot of the UK series) are going to translate to politics in the US version.
I second that. I’m 10 episodes in, the quality seems to be sliding down. Either that or my attention span.
Hmm, while he does look at the camera, to me it was more of a “enable / distinguish inner monologue” kind of trick.
The original also had this defect, IIRC. There were too many irons in the fire, as it were, to give any of them justice.