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comment by b_b
b_b  ·  4302 days ago  ·  link  ·    ·  parent  ·  post: The Economics of Netflix's "House of Cards"

To pick on another Spacey movie, I compare it to the Usual Suspects. I would argue that movie is also garbage, despite the near universal praise it gets. Why? Because it's not at all interesting to watch an actor be nothing but manipulative on screen. Acting by nature is manipulative. Acting is pretending, so when you see an actor doing nothing but pretending to be someone else, its not extraordinary--it's just acting. In the Usual Suspects, we're supposed to be blown away that Verbal was making it all up, but it's a prewritten script so who cares? It is terrible by virtue of what it is, not by any fault of the actor.

Lying is interesting in movies and TV when the lying isn't the point, but the underlying reason for the lie is. Being an unredeemable, manuipulative, vengeful jerk isn't motivation; its just lazy, uninspired writing. Walter White is a bad guy, but is the antithesis of Frank Underwood. He fundamentally cares about people, but also is sick of being pushed around. We can tell that he's either a bad guy who's been pretending to be good his whole life or vice versa. He's complicated. Frank is as simple as they come, and so is everyone else in that show. As far as I can tell, none of the characters has any depth beyond the makeup they're wearing. It's not about liking; it's about caring. There's a huge difference.