Tonight marks the return of one of the more eclectic and
bizarre installments of our new “Golden Age” of Television: Brooklyn 99. When Brooklyn 99
premiered a couple years ago it was quickly treated as the next thing in
sitcoms and heralded by a lot of critics as something you needed to be watching
to be in the know. However, 3
years later the show holds a very different place in the television landscape
as it’s struggled to define its identity as a lighthearted and non-serious cop
comedy in the wake of growing concerns over police misconduct and
brutality. Maybe I’ll dedicate
more time to Brooklyn 99’s
metamorphosis in a future review but for right now, the show’s shift in focus
rather than risk getting into more serious fair reminds me of a highly underrated
British comedy starring Rowan Atkinson and David Haig entitled The Thin Blue Line.
Running for only 2 seasons and 14 episodes from 1995 to 1996
The Thin blue Line revolved around
the police force of a fictional London small town suburb called Gasforth. Rowan Atkinson, now having transitioned
from the dry witty cad style of comedy that punctuated his work on Blackadder to the more bafoonish cartoon
comedy of Mr. Bean, plays the head of
the precincts uniformed division as Inspector Raymond Fowler. On the flip side, David Haig, whom I
know mainly from The Thick of It,
play Detective Inspector Derek Grim, head of criminal investigations.
What this essentially means, for those not in the know, is
that the show splits the focus down the middle of the police force between the
uniformed beat cops under Fowler and the plain-clothes detectives under
Grim. Though rivalries are always
a natural set-up for comedy this one is fairly unique as it’s informed by more
than just clashing status level at the job but rather a full on class of
ideology and values but more on that in a bit.
Even though Grim and some of his officers are afforded focus
they’re usually their to generate conflict as most of the stories revolve
around Fowler and his collection of constables. There’s Constable Kevin Goody, played by James Dreyfus, a
cartoonish incompetent and lovably effeminate officer who’s often enamored with
fellow Constable Maggie Habib, played by Mina Anwar. Habib is easily the show’s stand out characters and one of
the most unique and engaging female cop characters I’ve seen this side of Lady
Cop.
She’s an utterly unique characer and not just because she’s
a Muslim woman whose also a cop though to be fair, this is pretty much the only
time I’ve encountered that in Western television. What makes her so much more as a character is how modern she
ends up. It’s long been a rule of
sitcoms that men are the goofy ones while the women are the practical ones who
get people out of scrapes but The Thin
Blue Line takes that in a different direction.
Rather than having Inspector Fowler as your standard issue
dumb group-dad of the precinct his character is that of an overly literal and
traditional British stereotype.
The show actually jokes at one point that he was probably born middle
aged and Atkinson really sells that to a comical extreme. He’s the kind of guy who’d rather build
airplane models and read Sherlock Holmes than have sex and I mean that very
literally. This ends up forcing
Habib into the role of his equal and opposite, an officer who’s every bit as
competent as Fowler at the job but informed by sexually liberated sensibilities
and modernist pursuits.
She’s essentially playing “the lady’s man” character
archetype from a lot of sitcoms, your Joey from Friends or Barney from How I
Met Your Mother, only without the creepy misogynistic undertones those
characters tend to bring with them.
What really works is how well the show just LETS Habib be who she is,
she’s never punished for her casual attitudes towards sex nor is her being a
Muslim ever used as her sole defining character trait. It also helps that Mina Anwar
completely sells her part as the smartest woman in a room full of middle aged
men who are very good at acting like they know what they’re doing while they
make fools of themselves.
The cast is rounded out by Rudolph Walker as Constable Frank
Gladstone, a Trinidadian constable who’s unfortunately often pushed to the
background but is hilarious when he pops up and Serena Evans as police sergeant
Patricia Dawkins. Dawkins is also
Fowler’s current girlfriend, which is where a lot of the jokes about how little
Fowler cares for sex come up. It’s
actually kind of bizarre watching it as an American, in that if this show was
made in the states the dynamic of would almost certainly be reversed with the
woman as the more sexually unconcerned partner in a relationship. Part of this is that Fowler is working
from the “no sex please, we’re British” stereotype palette, although it often
feels like the show meant for him to be an Asexual man but was just unable to
fully realize the idea. Still,
it’s decidedly peculiar to see a sitcom where the two prominent women
characters are the ones most concerned with getting laid.
However, Thin Blue
Line makes the smart decision to not just be sex jokes and shockingly well
written female characters but actually slip into more serious discussion on
things like police misconduct and ethics.
This is what I alluded to earlier about the clash of ideologies between
Grim and Fowler. Fowler is, as
mentioned, a by the book, letter of the law type cop, a man defined by his
slavish devotion to purpose as expressly stated through the text of his
vocation. Grim, on the other hand,
views that kind of police work as reductive and views results as the sole
determinate of right, wrong, and justice.
This essentially makes them
the age-old clash between those willing to bend the law for results and those
who live along the thin blue line.
The best example of this is series 2 episode 1, Court in the
Act (haha,) where Grim plants evidence to incriminate a suspected drug
dealer. As the episode winds to
the third act Grim and Fowler enter into a heated debate about the ethics of
Grim’s actions, with any pretense of comedy slipping away. Grim’s justification is that so long as
a criminal was put away it doesn’t matter how, that the safety of the public is
more important than the stipulations of law. This is Grim’s viewpoint in a nutshell and goes hand-in-hand
with his authoritarian viewpoints and general disdain for systems and
rules. Fowler responds with
possibly the perfect embodiment of his own philosophy stating that “the public
can be in no greater danger than when the police think themselves above the
law.”
I couldn’t say how the scene was received in 1996 but
watching this moment today is shockingly moving and chilling given how relevant
it is after a year and a half of unrelenting stories of police misconduct. That’s true of Thin Blue Line overall, in that while I’m not sure if it was really
ahead of its own time it is decidedly ahead of this time and manages to blend
comedy and seriousness expertly in a lot of great episodes.
Maybe there’s a lesson in that beyond just the skill
required to pull off the kind of tonal balancing act. In 1995, saying things like “better a criminal go free than
the police become criminals themselves” was treated as common sense, maybe
reacting with a bit of befuddlement that it needed to be said at all. However, 20 years later, we hear those
same words and suddenly it’s a powerful declaration for truth and justice
against a seemingly massive wave of corruption and violence. Maybe that means things a worse now or
maybe we’re just more aware of how blurry the thin blue line between order and
chaos always was.
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The Equestria Girls Movie 2: The Storm King's Revenge — Meeting with Storm Jr.
ReplyDelete- Fizzlepop Berrytwist: Something was odd here.
Delete- Storm Junior: [offscreen] Good one, Tempest.
- [The gang looks around as they hear Storm Junior's voice]
- Twilight Sparkle: Storm Junior?
- Storm Junior: Over here.
- [They look over their shoulders to find a holographic of Storm Junior's head on blue flames as if thinking it's a video call. They approach him]
- Oscar the Eagle: Storm Junior, you turned the citizens of Canterlot City into stone?
- Storm Junior: Just the way it was always meant to be, Omar.
- Oscar the Eagle: It's Oscar!
- Storm Junior: Whatever. But, fellas, I still need everything.
- Max the Bear: Forget everything you want, Storm Junior.
- Fizzlepop Berrytwist: Yeah, we wanna know why… [Her eyes widen as she realizes something] Wait a minute.
- [A memory, from her point of view, shows Storm Junior holding the Staff of Sacanas]
- Fizzlepop Berrytwist: The Storm King.
- Princess Twilight Sparkle: What did you say, Fizzle?
- Fizzlepop Berrytwist: The staff.
- [The memory shows Storm Junior smiling while holding the staff. In a flashback, the Storm King holds the staff as he walks]
- The Storm King: Let's get this storm started! Ooh! Hey, that's good. I should trademark that.
- [In the present]
- Fizzlepop Berrytwist: I should've known when he was holding the staff. - Storm Junior. You're the new Storm King. And you're also the original Storm King's son.
- Storm Junior: And I guess that I've inherited my father's attraction to you guys.
- Starlight Glimmer: I didn't know the Storm King had a child.
- Storm Junior: He didn't want people to know. Dad and I didn't always agree, but he was the only one who stood the domination of Canterlot.
- Princess Twilight Sparkle: That's absurd. Canterlot dominates no one.
- Storm Junior: Then why do you let the ponies take charge of Equestria while us, the satyrs, have to hide like rats in another world?
- Fizzlepop Berrytwist: People only reform, so that everyone can be good.
- Storm Junior: And when my father tried to conquer the world by killing you, Princess Twilight and your friends, and after Tempest…
- Fizzlepop Berrytwist: It's Fizzlepop Berrytwist!
- Storm Junior: Whatever. …betrayed him, you stood up against him by taking the staff, and then you've destroyed him!
- Princess Twilight Sparkle: So, that's exactly what this is about. Revenge.