I love Dexter, be
it reading Jeff Lindsay’s novels or watching the television series. It was
weird at first, rooting for the bad guy, but the more I read/watched, the more
I realized that “bad” had shades of grey. Lately, many shows feature
protagonists who are more anti-hero than hero. Take ABC’s Once Upon a Time, for example. It’s no secret that my favourite
character on that show is Rumplestiltskin/Mr. Gold, a man who killed his wife,
chopped a man’s hand off, held a woman hostage, and beat an old man with his cane,
twice. Through it all, I root for him. I feel the loss of his son, the anguish
in his love affair with Belle, the plunging psyche as he picked up the remains
of his prized possession, the chipped cup, from the hospital floor. Scandal is another example. Olivia and
her team have murdered, stolen, and lied. Olivia herself is in an affair with a
married man and was involved in rigging votes in the last presidential
election. Is it wrong to want to see her and Fitz together? To want Fitz to
remain blind to her conspiracy? To want Mellie to die in childbirth? To love
Cyrus for calling off the gun for hire he’d paid to murder his own husband to
keep the secret buried?
For two weeks now, I’ve been watching FX’s The Americans. The premise is
intriguing: Russian spies carrying out covert missions while posing as the all
American family. As I watched this week’s episode, I questioned my interest in
the show. Talk about anti-heroes? Elizabeth and Phillip pose as heads of a
nuclear family, living out the American Dream in their house in the suburbs with
their son and daughter. Last week, they used their garage to store the spy that
raped Elizabeth during her training in the trunk of their car. This week,
Elizabeth poisoned an innocent college student and the two blackmailed his
mother for the cure. Elizabeth played the nurse to the boy while Phillip beat
up the uncle, broke his hand, strong-armed the mother, and nearly suffocated
the boy to get what he wanted, which was for the mother to plant a bug in a
politician’s office. As I watched, I thought, “How horrible. I don’t even think
I like these characters.” Then Phillip sat in his car after suffocating the boy
and nearly cried while Elizabeth consoled him. I won’t say I root for him as I
do Dexter, but I think I watch to put together the glimpses of humanity. So
long as the gruesome brutality is balanced with the humanity, I may continue to
watch.
I am no stranger to television brutality. Shows like True Blood, Vampire Diaries, and Walking
Dead are full of it, but the macabre is acceptable, almost expected, given
that the characters are vampires and werewolves and hunters and zombies and
just trying to survive. Shows like this don’t bother me much. What I find
horrific is when the monsters are human, drawing blood for nothing more than
the horror of it. Dexter, I understand. He witnessed his mother brutally
murdered in front of him as a toddler. Dexter’s impulses are born of blood. He
knows what he does is wrong. Unable to quash his compulsion, he has found a way
to control it instead, killing only those who deserve to be killed. Not the
same for Joe Carroll on Fox’s The
Following, who gets others to kill for him a la Charles Manson. I can’t
figure out why he does what he does other than the fact that he can. American Horror Story is another show
that pushes the blood-soaked threshold, but it does so with a subtle irony and hidden
horror stereotype allusions that elevate it from horrific bloodbath to
interestingly compelling.
The line between good and evil has blurred for the
traditional superhero types as well. Gone are the days in which the hero does
good both in and out of their costumes, like Batman or Superman. Today’s heroes
fall nothing short of human. This week’s Arrow,
for example, showed Oliver brutalizing his own mother for answers. On Person of Interest, Detective Carter
often bends and/or breaks the law to save Reese and Finch. Even the president
of the United States is not exempt—this week’s Scandal saw Fitz murder Verna in her hospital bed to prevent the
jury tampering secret from getting out. Gone are the days of good and evil, of black
and white; welcome to the days of anti-heroism and shades of grey.
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