Another ''bad'' review:
http://variety.com/2017/tv/reviews/review-taboo-tom-hardy-fx-1201949054/
This show seems to induce quite divisive reactions.
That said, I find these kinds of reviews strangely devoid of any focus, mainly because they are guilty of the inconsistencies they attempt to criticize. So for instance, Mrs Saraya (whose best shows of 2016 involve painfully vapid outings such as ''Lemonade'' and ''the Girlfriend Experience'' ) laments the fact that Africa is mentioned as an undifferentiated continent in the series because while it may reflect the assumption of this period, it is no longer acceptable since ''it is no longer 1814''. In the same breath, she muses that the Delaney's character ''with his tortured passion, apparent abolitionist beliefs, angst regarding his father, and threatening swagger, he’s just too slick all around — a character that seems too perfect, modern, and badass to be a real man in 1814''. So on the one hand, she criticizes the show for being historically correct while on other hand, she is blaming a character for not being historically true enough. This is a lose-lose situation which betrays Mrs Saraya lack of insight into the period as most of the characteristics she mentioned were alive and kicking in the early 1800ies:
-''Tortured passion'': cough Byron cough (1788-1824)
-''Apparent abolitionist beliefs'': erm, abolitionist leanings may have not been so rare in 1814-after all, because the Abolition of Slave Trade Act was voted in 1807. So I do not see what is so extraordinary about Delaney holding some of the abolitionist beliefs.
-''Angst regarding his father'': Because ''father's angst'' is something only modern people experience . (BTW, Byron seems to have had a variations of mother's angst...)
-And apparently, only people in the ''modern'' period are ''badass''
Don't get me wrong, I may end up not liking Taboo at all. But the preachy, overwrought and superficial discourses on serious issues such as identity representations and race are the worst thing which has happened to artistic expression in general, and arts criticism in particular:
''But the attempts to make James sympathetic or admirable flatten him into caricature. And, most uncomfortably, the efforts specifically fall apart when it comes to race... this story beat also means that Hardy, a white man, is supposed to be playing a character who is mixed-race. Furthermore, James’ decade in Africa is given a kind of hand-waving occult power. James speaks a tribal language, seems familiar with a set of symbols from some kind of ritual or worship, and according to the rumors of others, engaged in some kind of cannibalism. But without the grounding specifics, these are lazily sketched signifiers about “dark magic''..But given that “Taboo” excels at creating the texture and nuance of London at this time, the vagueness around “Africa” is even more pronounced..''
This has more to do with virtue signaling than with reviewing. And it is plenty of BS too.
1) I didn't know that making someone a canibalistic monster, responsible for many death back in Africa (and possibly the sinking of a whole ship with slaves inside) is supposed to render a character ''admirable''. Good to know. . Also suggesting that giving a character a ''mixed-raced'' heritage makes him automatically more ''sympathetic'' is at best culturally myopic and at worst, borderline racist.
2) The notion that ''mix-raced'' characters should only be played by ''mix-raced'' actors is both bigoted and short sighted. Plus, not any ''mixed-raced'' combination will do. If one objects to a an actor of Afro-American-Indian descent playing Delaney (who is supposed to be of Irish-Nootka descent), does it warrant accusations of racism? And should one look for an actor of Nootka-Irish descent regardless of his talent?
3) We on the Taboo IMDB boards, have identified some of the symbols displayed in Delaney's lair (i.e. Adinkra symbols). So they are perfectly concrete and specific. I do not know what this reviewers means with her ''grounding specifics'' but given her review, it clearly seems that she has no idea either. Maybe she wanted a documentary on West African (or more specifically yoruba) spirituality? Then why reviewing Taboo at all?
Sorry for the rambling, but I strongly dislike preachy and entitled reviews even if they concern movies and works I strongly dislike.
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