RatskyWatsky
Hunky Nostradamus
Whoa, excellent stuff this week. Elizabeth and Gran's scenes in particular were just dynamite.
Hey -griffy-, you might want to check Sepinwall's review. The other thoughts section
In this installment about the ninth episode, Do Mail Robots Dream of Electric Sheep?, costume designer Jenny Gering and production designer Diane Lederman join script coordinator Molly Nussbaum and executive producers Joel Fields and Joe Weisberg to discuss every detail that goes into bringing the 1980s back to life.
More via the link.Ive loved The Americans desperately since the very beginning, but I dont think this full commitment to suffering was on display in Seasons 1 and 2. Early on, showrunners Joe Weisberg and Joel Fields attempted to tell stand-alone spy stories (think The Clock) to avoid scaring away those averse to heavy serialization. And last year, the plot engine was primarily fueled by a single mystery and, in the stern visage of Lee Tergesen, a lone antagonist. This third season, by contrast, has been all over the place: to EST meetings and drab hotel suites with Stan, to creepy, new-wave hell with Philip and Kimmy, to squalid Russian prisons with Nina. Like butterfly wings on the other side of the world, the bloodshed in Afghanistan and South Africa has gushed unpleasantly into the frame. And behind it all is the steady backbeat of the seasons presumed A-story: the KGB assessment and recruitment of Paige Jennings, a 16-year-old who, in Christianity, has already found an ideology worth living for. There were a few weeks in the middle of the season when even I began to despair. Had Weisberg and Fields overstuffed their pelmeni? Stans dubious defector plot felt miles away from whatever Elizabeth was doing with her liberal Afrikaner, Hans. But last nights brilliant Do Mail Robots Dream of Electric Sheep? set me straight. The Americans, like the Cold War that inspired it, is intentionally diffuse. Progress cant be tallied in any traditional way. To make sense of something so sweeping and so awful, one is forced to cling to that most fragile of concepts: faith.
That was certainly the only thing that kept Elizabeths face from fraying in the office last night, as she bared her soul to Betty without ever losing sight of the fact that soon enough shed be stopping Bettys heart. (Keri Russell, always strong, has been especially brilliant this season. Shes like a painter who continues to sacrifice brushes in pursuit of something more pure and more true.) Lois Smith, a titan at age 84, delivered an astonishing performance as Betty.1 Without ever moving from behind a creaking desk, she suffused the screen with the warmth of a life fully lived and quickly followed it with a sharp chill of fear at the prospect of that life coming to an end. It was easy to see what Betty was to Elizabeth: a maternal figure, a fellow wife, a good soldier stuck on the wrong side of the firing line. But its more devastating to think of what Elizabeth was to Betty: a glimpse of what Gil saw on the other side of the world and would never talk about; a fatal, unexpected jolt of the pain shed spent her life fearing and avoiding. Pill by pill, Betty aquiesced to the inevitable, but not without landing a few blows. Its the vanity of the ideologue to believe that little deaths add up to something greater, that by sacrificing Betty, Elizabeth was somehow making the world a better place. Contra Betty, I dont think Elizabeth is evil. I think shes just a fool. The only thing death ever adds up to is death.
And if Elizabeth is a fool, well, then so is everybody, on The Americans of 1983 and wherever it is that we all are in 2015. If theres been a theme to this remarkable season of television, its been compromise. Again and again, weve seen the little shortcuts and half-truths these characters have adopted to make what they need sync up with what they want: Stan and Oleg committing a double lutz of treason in order to free the woman they both love; Philip exploiting Kimmy to chase the intimacy he craves from his own daughter; Nina using another womans life as a crowbar in an attempt to escape her fate. Theres nothing clean about any of this, nothing particularly admirable. Theres a wide expanse between the war you want to win and the battles youre forced to fight. Gabriel was talking about love, but his words from last night ring true here as well: Life isnt planning for bolts of lightning. Its planting, tilling, and tending. Your fingernails get dirty. Occasionally, so does your soul. The Americans goes to the root of what it means to be human in any era, in any line of work, and tugs. What it unearths isnt very pretty. But thats exactly why it needs to be seen.
I dunno, this show feels like Mad Men to me I guess. It doesn't need something major going on to be interesting. It just moves along and keeps impressing me every week.
It's still a really good show. It's just that, compared to the previous seasons, the pacing is off for me, or feels that way atleast.
What was Phil pissed at Gabriel towards the end of the episode? Is it still Paige? or was it because they had to kill that old lady?
While this season had generally been good, I feel it's missing the tension of Stan ever getting close to catching these guys. They barely have any scenes together, let alone any kind of intertwined plot.
This in turn leads me to question the value in some of the side stories going on. The South African plot for example. Or Nina's ongoing story. That kind of feels forced just to keep the actor relevant. Although it does have the peripheral benefit of the entertaining Stan + Oleg scenes.
Stan has always been messed up.That's been my one major complaint about this show over the last two seasons. That they've kind of cut Stan's balls off. In the beginning it was like he was smart, intuitive, dedicated and somebody you could root for. And then they had him fucking around on his wife and then sniveling because she left him and now, he's kind of useless. Things may pick up with the defector and Oleg stuff, but the Oleg stuff is all about Nina again....ho hum. And I agree with you about Nina's story. It seems tacked on and frankly, I don't give a shit about her. To me, her story line was wrapped up last year. And they need a lot more Arkady instead of less.
But the stuff with Elizabeth and Philip and Paige has been really good this season and I enjoy the job Langella is doing. And Martha has been excellent too.
No. Paige is pretty much the best child character on TV right now and should remain on. Maybe all the other lazy bastards will use her as an example and end the reign of terrible TV kids.
haaanh? sally draper is a much more interesting character.
not that paige is bad, but all she's been so far is bible girl.
I like the show but they need to cut Paige story. I hate kids in tv shows they always fuck things up.
I like the show but they need to cut Paige story. I hate kids in tv shows they always fuck things up.
haaanh? sally draper is a much more interesting character.
not that paige is bad, but all she's been so far is bible girl.
What? No.
The Paige story is THE source of dramatic tension between the leads this season. What a ridiculous suggestion.
Why not get rid of Stan & Elizabeth and make it the Clark and Martha hour.(which honestly I would actually watch)
I guess I just cant take her serious in this show. Stupid kid trying to be an activist. Her story is just boring and I dont like it. I will be pissed if they manage to turn her into a russian spy, hopefully nothing comes out of that story direction.
You're in an extreme minority on this.
Well, to be fair anyone who watches this show is in an extreme minority.
The problem with Page is that her depth in character is totally shallow. I mean first she was involved with the church because of her belief in greater god, and now, she has an interest for being an activist, despite the way she is looking at the matter totally contradict her peaceful mentality she had with the the church. The she is depicted in the show is very playful and totally void of any seriousness in regards to her opinion as a character.
Old lady had it right about feeling "in tune" working late at night away from all the hustling.
Obviously I don't feel close to my ex-husband when doing it, but still...
Just saw this. Glad they're closing in on the minimum five seasons Landgraf has referenced in the past. Really, my hope is for them to at least bring the show to a planned conclusion.
Kudos to FX for sticking with it. The higher-ups at the network must be fans. I want to see a proper conclusion!
I hope this show starts to gain more viewers. A heavily serialized show like this needs to be on netflix in order for new viewers to easily catch up and join the fun. Unfortunately, amazon video just isn't popular enough yet.