by Christopher Barr
“It was the best of times, it was the worst of times, it was the
age of wisdom, it was the age of foolishness, it was the epoch of belief, it
was the epoch of incredulity, it was the season of Light, it was the season of
Darkness, it was the spring of hope, it was the winter of despair, we had
everything before us, we had nothing before us, we were all going direct to
Heaven, we were all going direct the other way……”
- Charles Dickens, A Tale of Two Cities
“I have often found that bleeding hearts have an ironic fear of
their own blood.”
- Frank
Underwood
House of Cards is a Netflix Original Series of 13 episodes per season about
ruthless politics in America. This ruthlessness is conveyed brilliantly
through the thoughts and actions of Frank Underwood, played masterfully by the
always stellar Kevin Spacey. Alongside Frank is his beautiful wife
Claire, played by the riveting Robin Wright, together they climb over the
skulls of the casualties that they have either stomped out, black-mailed or killed
to get to the top. They are very aware that everything is just business,
even adultery. I think the heart of the show isn’t politics, it’s the
toll ambition and power has over the human being.
I will refrain from
revealing any major plot points in the 2 seasons that are available on Netflix
but I do recommend watching the entire 26 episodes before reading any
further. The great atmospheric filmmaker David Fincher set the tone of
the show by directing the first couple of episodes, creating a mood and
ambience that holds throughout all installments.
Frank starts out at
the beginning of this Shakespearian-type tale of deceit and murder as a
Congressman that is House Majority Whip on Capitol Hill in Washington D.C.
His job is to be the bull that ‘whips’ the party into shape when various
bills or amendments need passing or crushing. Numerous Congressmen on the
Hill have their constituencies to think about first, as they should, before they
agree to offer their name ‘yay or nay’
to a vote. While in the legislature Frank must ensure party discipline
and to maintain some order in all the political chaos, while often aggressively
painting the bigger picture to these men and women of the government.
"It is not necessary for the politician to be the slave of
the public's group prejudices, if he can learn how to mold the mind of the
voters in conformity with his own ideas of public welfare and public
service."
- Edward Bernays, Propaganda
One of the most
impactful aspects of the show isn’t the politics but rather the environment
that human beings themselves occupy and what they do to aggressively maintain it. The
relationships in this show range from hollow to vindictive, from off-putting to
murderous. To live this life as a politician one has to give up the very
humanity that they claim to be fighting for. To achieve any great level
of success in politics one, it appears, must sell their soul to the devil to
get what they want.
“Men are so simple and so much inclined to obey immediate needs
that a deceiver will never lack victims for his deceptions.”
- Machiavelli
Sometimes Frank has to
create the illusion of power and the understanding by those around him, that he
is capable of horrendous things if pushed into a corner. Vlad the Impaler
ordered a forest of impaled bodies to ward off the much bigger Turkish
army back in the 15th century. Fear is a powerful weapon in
warfare; politics is war without the guns just as war is politics without the
suits.
House of Cards is
quite Shakespearian in nature with a focus on two specific plays, Macbeth and Richard
III. The second season is over and who knows how many more seasons there
will be but you can count on it not ending too well for Frank Underwood, much
in the same fate as Macbeth and Richard III underwent during the denouements of
their respective stories. Even Frank’s wife Claire resembles Lady Macbeth
to some extent. She is often present and encouraging when Frank has to
drop the axe on someone. She in some cases pushes him to do so echoing
Lady Macbeth.
The real tragedies of
this show are the good people, they pretty much always lose. It’s not
good to be good in House of Cards because good in politics is weakness and
weakness is death. Oddly enough while watching you find yourself rooting
for the bad people and hoping the good people don’t get their due justice.
Frank manipulates many people throughout this show and the one he manipulates
the most during his many soliloquies… is us.
House of Cards is a
very clever show and is quite grounded in realism. The show has been
praised for its authenticity as it sinks deep into the web of American politics
and journalism. A young journalist named Zoe Barnes gets caught up in
that web in order to get what everyone else in that town is out to get… power.
The problem with the show
is it promotes Frank and Claire Underwood as all-knowing strategic thinkers and
everyone else are somewhat simplistic and asking to be deceived. There
are very little consequences as they slither their way to the top of the Hill.
In reality very little in Washington gets done because people on both
sides operate strategically rather than like Frank expediting things quickly
because he’s surrounded by idiots. I suppose that does the show a service
in the form of a moving plot. Actual politics might bore an audience to
tears and possibly suicide.
House of Cards is fun
and it is addictive and that’s what people really like about the show.
The show isn’t 101 in politics no more than David Fincher’s masterpiece Se7en
is 101 in police investigation, but by god was it not entertaining and forcibly
grounding? Watching Frank slick his way around the government is engaging
because we want to see if he’ll ever get caught for all the horrible things
that he’s done, or maybe some of us wishes he never gets caught.
Hopefully the show doesn’t go as long as Dexter because that got pretty tiring
watching him constantly slip through the fingers of the cops around him week
after agonizing week.
“Choosing money over power is a mistake almost everyone
makes. Money is the big mansion in Saratoga that starts falling apart after
ten years. Power is that old stone building that stands for
centuries. I cannot respect someone who does not see the
difference.”
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