+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast
Results 1 to 10 of 11

Thread: Look! It Moves! by Adi Tantimedh #135: American Horror Subversion

  1. #1
    Administrator
    Join Date
    May 2009
    Posts
    9,276

    Default Look! It Moves! by Adi Tantimedh #135: American Horror Subversion



    It?s lurking, always lurking. Peeking out from the corner of my attention like a Goth wallflower that knows I?ll notice sooner or later and finally pay her some attention. Then I?ll see that she?s completely mad and smart and totally horny and even then I?m still not sure she?s such a great idea. But hey, she?s never dull.

    I?m talking about AMERICAN HORROR STORY.

    You know what I?m talking about, the FX cable series from GLEE and NIP/TUCK creator Ryan Murphy. The one about a dysfunctional ordinary American family who move into a gothic house in Los Angeles that?s full of ghosts. It?s not warm and fuzzy. It?s all messy with sex and blood and murder just like any good show should be.


    I?ve been railing for ages against the generic nature of network TV shows, so AMERICAN HORROR STORY should be right up my street in its deliberate kicking against everything generic about mainstream TV. It takes almost everything held sacred by American society and TV and gives it a thorough kicking with fabulous studded bovver boots. The show touches on every topical hot button America is currently wringing its hands over: high school bullying, abortion, infidelity, rape, sexual deviance, serial murder and house ownership.

    I admit I?ve been wary of Ryan Murphy?s work, at his angry contempt at the dishonesty and cruelty of straight society, his general misanthropy, his depiction of women as scheming, screaming, manipulative, hysterical monsters. That can get exhausting. He has form for angry, merciless satire attacking the sexual mores and emotional hypocrisies of the middle class and so-called respectable people like doctors, businessmen, sports figures, celebrities and authority figures in general in shows like NIP/TUCK. Even his movie adaptation of August Burroughs? book RUNNING WITH SCISSORS is shot through with deeply personal anger at adults? betrayals and abuse of children, and this bitter satirical vision is present in GLEE, where he found the perfect vehicle for sneaking through biting satire and pleas for tolerance using the musical as sugar-coating.


    Where other interesting shows use an archetypal story as their basis ? BREAKING BAD is Macbeth in American suburbia, SONS OF ANARCHY is Hamlet in a biker gang - AMERICAN HORROR STORY does something much more layered and complex. It combines the gothic story with ironic melodrama, coming off like Tennessee Williams on Red Bull spiked with PCP. There?s a knowing campness about it as it constantly teeters right on the edge of total farce, sometimes tripping right over the line. The hapless family being haunted and manipulated by ghosts are completely oblivious that these weird people that keep popping up to interact with them are in fact dead, since they still think they?re living in a rational universe. The Dad is an ineffectual lump of male smugness and privilege as he tries to salvage a marriage ripped apart by his affair with one of his students. The Mum evolves into a classic heroine of melodrama, an emotional wreck and increasingly martyred as a victim of the schemes of the ghosts: the Mean Girl Ghost wants her unborn baby, the product of a rape by a ghost in a gimp suit (which occurred in the pilot). The teen daughter is angry with her parents and falls in love with the teenage sociopath who murdered a lot of the people that wound up as ghosts in the house, who himself is a ghost.



    AMERICAN HORROR STORY is anything but generic and the closest American TV is ever going to get to THE LEAGUE OF GENTLEMEN. Like the denizens of Royston Vasey are grotesques and horrors enacting an endless series of darkly comic situation horrors, the ghosts of AMERICAN HORROR STORY are the most proactive, scheming, horny lunatics with the best dialogue and the most fun as they inflict horror upon horror on their victims. In fact, AMERICAN HORROR STORY is practically a sitcom about a bunch of horny ghosts and the clueless family they pull shenanigans on. Everyone is a prisoner and victim of tragic flaws and secrets they can?t let go of, the basic tenets of melodrama. You get the feeling that every tragedy in the show might have been averted if they had all gotten some decent psychiatric help, except the Dad is a psychiatrist and a pretty crap one, which is part of the irony.



    I wonder why more hasn?t been written about this show and Ryan Murphy?s work. He seems to occupy the same cultural space as Pedro Almodovar, Todd Haynes, John Waters and Douglas Sirk. Sirk, a European who began his career in Weimar Germany working with Brecht before embarking on a film career in the 1930s before fleeing the Nazis to decamp to Hollywood, pioneered the school of vibrant, Technicolor melodramas in movies like ALL THAT HEAVEN ALLOWS, MAGNIFICENT OBSESSION and IMITATION OF LIFE, all carrying layers of symbolism, irony and social commentary under gorgeous surfaces and production values. Almodovar has acknowledged Sirk has a chief influence and it shows in his movies. Todd Haynes? recent HBO adaptation of MILDRED PIERCE was nothing if not a Sirkian melodrama. John Waters habitually pushes the Sirkian melodrama of his movies into all-out piss-take comedy. Of all of them, Murphy has been the one storyteller who has steadily worked under the structures and constraints of network television. The ironic Sirkian style has been present in all of Murphy?s work all the way back to his WB teen comedy series POPULAR, then became more confident with subsequent shows like NIP/TUCK and POPULAR.



    What distinguishes AMERICAN HORROR STORY is the way Murphy uses the conventions of slasher and horror movies as tools for social satire but also to deconstruct the genre by indulging in its more absurd side and even having the ghosts comment on that. The most subversive idea in the show is that murdering someone doesn?t get rid of them. They just come back, more annoying than ever, and they want to have sex with you. Forever.

    Haunting the keyboard at lookitmoves@gmail.com

    Follow the official LOOK! IT MOVES! twitter feed at http://twitter.com/lookitmoves for thoughts and snark on media and pop culture,stuff for future columns and stuff I may never spend a whole column writing about.

    Look! It Moves! © Adisakdi Tantimedh

  2. #2
    Consultant of Cool Eyemelt's Avatar
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Posts
    152

    Default

    Whenever I see this show I just can't get Rentaghost out of my head. "DON'T GO INTO THE CELLAR!"
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------


    http://eyemelt.blogspot.com/

  3. #3
    Way Cool
    Join Date
    Feb 2010
    Location
    Sunderland, UK
    Posts
    49

    Default

    Just as I was thinking that I was the only one who loved this brilliant show! Pity I hadn't got up to the part where you find out that psycho boy is a ghost. But I suppose I shouldn't be surprised.

  4. #4
    Wrote the Book on Cool Rootfireember's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    Couch. With kitties.
    Posts
    712

    Default

    I like this show, but the ep where the black dhalia ended up one if the house ghosts seemed a bit meh, to me. Ah well. Still watching to see where it will go. I'm curious if it'll somehow turn out that pretty much everyone is dead and no one has realized it.
    Ingredients: Spite, Vitriol, Lycanthropy,Mt.dew, Soylent Green, Books,Knitting, Books, Books, Arsenic, Doom, Books, Lead, OMGKITTIES, Peer-Reviewed Journals, Natural Flavor, Artificial Coloring.
    Warnings: Keep out of reach of Children. May bite when provoked.

  5. #5
    Zen Master of Cool
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Posts
    876

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by ianw700 View Post
    Just as I was thinking that I was the only one who loved this brilliant show! Pity I hadn't got up to the part where you find out that psycho boy is a ghost. But I suppose I shouldn't be surprised.
    Oops, sorry. It'd been at least three weeks so I thought the statute of limitations on spoiling that bit was past.

    I did, however, refrain from spoiling at least half a dozen other revelations.

  6. #6
    Zen Master of Cool
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Posts
    876

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Eyemelt View Post
    Whenever I see this show I just can't get Rentaghost out of my head. "DON'T GO INTO THE CELLAR!"
    Everything bad happens in a cellar!

  7. #7
    Zen Master of Cool
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Posts
    876

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Rootfireember View Post
    I like this show, but the ep where the black dhalia ended up one if the house ghosts seemed a bit meh, to me. Ah well. Still watching to see where it will go. I'm curious if it'll somehow turn out that pretty much everyone is dead and no one has realized it.
    The Black Dahlia seems to be there to remind us that this house is in Los Angeles, because otherwise it doesn't really have the feel of LA at all. And also she's another symbol of the misogyny and general abuse of women by society.

    I keep thinking the general arc of the show is whether the clueless family is going to eventually become the latest victims and ghosts that haunt the house.

  8. #8
    Wrote the Book on Cool Rootfireember's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    Couch. With kitties.
    Posts
    712

    Default

    I guess I get it. It still felt a bit forced to me. And the psych dad just seems...clueless a lot of the time.

    Still, can't wait for the next ep.
    Ingredients: Spite, Vitriol, Lycanthropy,Mt.dew, Soylent Green, Books,Knitting, Books, Books, Arsenic, Doom, Books, Lead, OMGKITTIES, Peer-Reviewed Journals, Natural Flavor, Artificial Coloring.
    Warnings: Keep out of reach of Children. May bite when provoked.

  9. #9
    Zen Master of Cool
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Posts
    876

    Default

    Quote Originally Posted by Rootfireember View Post
    I guess I get it. It still felt a bit forced to me. And the psych dad just seems...clueless a lot of the time.

    Still, can't wait for the next ep.
    Oh, I agree - it felt forced.

    Psych Dad is made clueless because Murphy so clearly has contempt for him and his hypocrisies.

  10. #10
    Wrote the Book on Cool Rootfireember's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    Couch. With kitties.
    Posts
    712

    Default

    How many eps do we have left?
    Ingredients: Spite, Vitriol, Lycanthropy,Mt.dew, Soylent Green, Books,Knitting, Books, Books, Arsenic, Doom, Books, Lead, OMGKITTIES, Peer-Reviewed Journals, Natural Flavor, Artificial Coloring.
    Warnings: Keep out of reach of Children. May bite when provoked.

+ Reply to Thread
Page 1 of 2 12 LastLast

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts