A Broader Perspective On This Series
To what was initially my great surprise, HBO today renewed it for a second season, having only just run the second of ten episodes for the first season. I was also surprised to learn that Succession is supposed to be a comedy! I was surprised because it is not funny. I just watched the second episode, and laughed a total of once. Given how thoroughly repulsive every single main character is, there is/was the potential for comedy, if not necessarily for humor. Comedy shows man at his worst. It puts him in a situation that any moron could handle, and then watches as he fucks it up. Tragedy, conversely, shows humankind at its most admirable and noble. It puts the protagonist in a situation that is literally impossible to overcome, and we marvel at how close s/he comes to prevailing before floundering. I want to see everyone in the Roy family come to a humiliating end. I am not rooting for a single smug, spoiled, stupid, strident, super-entitled one of them; so this sure as shit ain’t a tragedy.
What it is, though, is a creation of Jesse Armstrong, who has great success in running English comedy series, none of which I have seen. I am fond of English wit. I love A Fish Called Wanda. I I love Wild Target. We can’t attribute my tedium with Succession to me not “getting” English humor.
But wait; there’s more. HBO’s own Veep was created by Jesse Armstrong, and it was a comic powerhouse of the acerbic and droll—until its most recent season, which did not include Jesse Armstrong. Now I understand why HBO, having done so well with Armstrong in the past, wanted to get Season Two locked down pronto. That, on the face of it, makes sense. Let’s look beneath the face. There are differences between Succession and Veep. Succession is one hour long (and it feels like it’s much longer), neither makes me laugh nor entertains me and features players who, other than David Rasche, have little-to-no comic acting bona fides. Veep runs for a very fast-paced half hour, made me laugh and feel entertained until its most recent season and has comic acting experience up the yingyang. The characters in both shows are assholes, but Veep’s entourage are not rich, entitled assholes. As one user review I read on IMDb said, “It’s fun watching rich people be assholes . . . up to a point.” That point is much less than one hour.
To summarize: the promo leading into Episode Two includes a quote testifying to how much more funny Succession becomes with each episode. The quote was from The Wall Street Journal. When was the last time that you turned to The Wall Street Journal for advice about humor?