Love the one you’re
with while you're with them
“You know, I do like your program.
But it does make the world seem unbearably real.”
-Mrs. Kish
I guess it was inevitable that we would come to this
point: the sexy, sexy episode. Though The
Hour is clearly indebted to, and in some cases is clearly copying, Mad Men we can all agree at this point
that The Hour is not that show. It is not a show of subtly. While Mad Men interests itself in being character
study and piece of historical commentary, The Hour is far more interested in
the more superficial love triangles and conspiracy plots. I don’t mean this as an insult; when done
right these things can be very, very good, and The Hour has proven itself good
at them. What it isn’t so good at are the things that are right in Mad Men’s wheelhouse. When this show
tries to focus on characters or historical embarrassments, it’s never as good
as it thinks it is. As it stands, The
Hour is surprisingly better when it grabs hold of more standard story
elements and uses them for all they’re worth.
And what says that better than an episode in which
everybody starts having sex with everybody else (or at least trying to)? Yes, having
a period drama in which everybody hooks up – and where it is implied that “the
past wasn’t as sexually repressed as you think!” – is a bit of a clichéd move, and
one that tends to bring down critical ire when it’s clear that shows are adding
ahistorical sex scenes just to titillate, it somehow works here. Of course part
of the reason it works in because it is believe that people in the 1950s would
have that much sex, but it’s also because the sex – which is not done for titillation,
means something here. In a show that’s about shifting, unstable alliances, in
helps to have that reflected in the actions of the characters that we spend the
most time with.
But let’s back up, as that was not the main drive of
tonight’s episode. No, the major portion of the narrative concerned Freddie’s
continued investigation into The Conspiracy, which even though it’s never gone
away, certainly feels like it returned in full force tonight. We follow Ben around
as he visits Kish’s home and meets with his widow, then goes on to question
Lady Elms, all in the name of finding our more about that mysterious film strip
he received. Yet his investigation hits a few roadblocks, as he meets up with unacceptable
answers, and begins to notice that he is being followed.
It’s here where Freddie’s actions meet up once again with
the production of “The Hour”, and it helps to cement all of the disparate plot
point together. While the big connection here is that Freddie’s stalkers are in
fact investigating the whole department to find a Soviet spy, which tells us
that a.) Clarence knows far more than he lets on and b.) that someone on the
news team will be revealed to be a spy before the series is out, it’s the
smaller connections that I’m interested.
All of this drama that going on with Freddie allows the
other stuff – the historical connection to the events at the Suez Canal and Budapest,
Bel and Hector’s ongoing affair, the power plays – to play out in the background,
where they can make the most impact through brevity. What’s more, Freddie’s
virtual absence in the office also keeps him connected, as we see both how much
“The Hour” needs Freddie and how much in over his head that he is that he is
willing to abandon the work that he supposedly loves.
And of course this all swings around to Freddie once more
when the crew goes out to celebrate his birthday at the end of the episode,
which leads to the sexy times mentioned above, and even more shifting alliances.
Bel, who’s apparently turned on by drunken men, starts making goo-goo eyes at
Freddie, but quickly stops when Hector walks in. Isaac is unable to close the
deal with Sissy, while Freddie settles for sex with Lix. Everything ends this
next morning with everyone about where they were the night before in the
professional lives, but questioning just what the hell had happened to the
personal ones.
Quotes and Other
Thoughts:
A mixture of good and bad news tonight. The good: The Hour has been renewed for a second season. The bad: tonight’s BBC America airing of the episode was shortened from
75 minutes to the traditional hour. Sure, there were less and shorter
commercial breaks, and a few briefs sections were speeded up, but that still
means that parts were cut out. I assume this means that The Hour doesn’t get great number for BBC-A, and we might not see
that second season air stateside.
Poor Isaac. Not only is he stuck doing a pathetic story
on the start up of a new nuclear power plant, but he is also unable to get
Sissy to dance with him, and he has started smoking to fit in, and he’s not very
good at it. Just say no, Isaac.
So we all agree that Sissy in the double agent, right?
That’s what I thought.
The one development I didn’t agree with tonight was the
depiction of Hector’s home life as dull and repressed. While I can see how this
can be a way to legitimize an affair, doing so narratively after the affair has
already happened seems as if the show is trying to let Hector off the hook for
something that up until this point has seemed reprehensible.
“I’m not here to hurt you. I’m from the BBC.”
“Well, who needs a bumper anyway?”
“No, that’s not possible. Government regulations say you
should stay up all night.”
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