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Tag: Keri Russell

  • The Diplomat’s Creator Knows What Happens After That Wild Ending

    The Diplomat’s Creator Knows What Happens After That Wild Ending

    What a time for Netflix’s hit political thriller to return. Days before the election, season two of Netflix’s The Diplomat starring Keri Russell as Kate Wyler, a U.S. ambassador to the U.K. caught in the midst of a political crisis, hit the streaming platform. [Spoilers ahead]. By the end of the six-episode second season, Kate learns that the mastermind behind the maritime bombing that and set off the events of the series was neither Russia nor the U.K. Prime Minister, but U.S. Vice President Grace Penn, played on the series by Oscar and Emmy winner Allison Janney. Talk about an October surprise.

    On a new episode of Still Watching, hosts Hillary Busis and Chris Murphy chat with creator and executive producer of The Diplomat Debora Cahn about how they engineered that shocker of an ending for season two, in which president William Rayburn (Michael McKean) drops dead after finding out Penn’s machinations—making nefarious Grace Penn the new President of the United States.

    “I like to come into the season with a plan, but then throw it in the garbage as soon as possible,” Cahn said—“if one of the writers has a better idea, and often they do.”

    Cahn and her writing team considered the implications of crafting a storyline that ended with an elder president dropping dead while in office—a plot twist that may have felt a bit too close to home just a few months ago. “We thought that that was going to sort of send the wrong message right before the election,” she said. Luckily for The Diplomat, U.S. politics took a different turn. “We did not anticipate this particular plot twist that happened in the real world,” said Cahn, with Kamala Harris becoming the Democratic nominee for president.

    There are other real world political corollaries baked into The Diplomat as well. Hillary Clinton, Cahn said, has been on her mind “from the very beginning of the series,” and Janney told Vanity Fair that she partially based her character on the former Secretary of State. “It’s Hillary Clinton, but it’s also Samantha Power and Susan Rice,” says Cahn. “And certainly Kamala Harris, who was, when I was first developing the series, just being chosen as Biden’s running mate. There’s a lot about the Kate VP plot that came from the selection of Kamala Harris.”

    As for where season three will take Kate and Grace Penn, Cahn has some ideas, but notes that the direction sort of depends on how things shake out with next week’s presidential election. “I don’t know what country we’re going to be living in a week from now,” she says. “So we try to leave ourselves a little bit open for the possibility of continuing to have a conversation with the world that we’re in.”

    Chris Murphy

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  • How Keri Russell Decided to “Punch the Living Shit” Out of Rufus Sewell

    How Keri Russell Decided to “Punch the Living Shit” Out of Rufus Sewell

    The fight took a full day to film, and while the experience of figuring it out was light and playful, the significance of it working correctly proved pivotal. Up until this point, Cahn—a veteran of shows ranging from Grey’s Anatomy to The West Wing to Homeland—had been toying around with scripts that juggled elements of heavy drama and loose farce. The Kate-Hal collision represented a kind of make-or-break fusion of those elements. “Because you’re trying to figure out the tone, you’re like, Okay, what’s this going to be?” Russell says. “By the third episode, everyone had found their footing a bit and we were like, ‘This is where we are.…’ It cranks the volume—you’re either with it or you’re not.”

    Sewell puts the moment in starker terms: “It’s like the screwball equivalent of chopping Robert Baratheon’s head off in Game of Thrones. We’ve established that you live in a world where that can happen.” Except, instead of decapitations, we’re talking here about punches to the face.

    The beauty of Russell’s performance in this scene is that, while it descends into a rather pathetic display of petty violence, the Emmy nominee never loses sight of Kate’s devastation. “It’s so painful,” Russell says. “She’s not saying, ‘You fucked my best friend’ or ‘You stole all this money from me.’ She’s saying, ‘We loved each other so much and we tried so hard to make it work, and we both agreed that we’re not going to do it anymore because it’s been so painful for us. We both agreed to quit at the same time so we could make it okay for each other. Were you telling the truth?’”

    Sewell calls it a “scary scene,” meanwhile—one in which he played Hal’s fighting for Kate’s continued belief in him, for their ability to move forward together amid the great dysfunction around them. (As the scene consistently shows, security guards loom on the other side of the garden, uncomfortably watching this very private moment.) Kate slowly winds him up, goading him into confessing his deception, which he tries helplessly to explain. “That’s his position,” Sewell says. “That’s what’s hilarious about it, because he fucking means it. He does!”

    The actual mechanics of the fight were figured out largely on the fly. Of course, there was the punch, which Cahn, Russell, et al. felt very in sync on as they got to filming. There was the wrestling in the grass, some moves of which Cahn demonstrated for her cast. (“I have a big brother. I gave them moves that I used as a nine-year-old to wrestle to the floor a 17-year-old.”) There’s the way in which Hal essentially gives up and lets Kate overtake him—a dynamic shift Cahn pushed for as the actors got into it. In one moment, Kate plays dead. (“Keri is small, but when she plays dead it’s quite difficult to handle her,” Sewell says.) Through it all, Russell felt at one with the elements. “At one point, my dress was up, my underwear was showing,” she recalls, to which Sewell interjects: “Oh, yeah. Arse in the wind. There goes Russell!

    But it’s all in service of a poignant resolution, even as the fight ends with a simple interruption. (There’s a lot going on this particular day.) Russell was surprised by how emotional the scene felt the longer they filmed—and how oddly that dovetailed with the material getting funnier. This is in many ways a credit to the patient, focused direction. “[Andrew] wasn’t giving us much direction for a long time, he was just letting us play,” Sewell says. Bernstein, who’d worked with Cahn on The West Wing and Russell on The Americans, favored moving, long takes in handheld form. “It really set the glamour and the drama of the world—and the funny too,” Russell says.

    Cahn and Bernstein were aware of how difficult it can be to comically depict one spouse hitting another, but they were willing to take that risk and depict a core reality of this particular couple. “I knew that I wanted it to get physical in a way that was completely undignified and ridiculous—and that never felt dangerous, but did feel out of control,” Cahn says. “They are able to hit that sweet spot of feeling like they’re having a good time with each other, and I hope it feels safe for the audience.”

    From here, The Diplomat richly explores this dysfunctional marriage with an underlying caustic sweetness, having shown us what Kate and Hal can look like at their desperate worst. “I try to push them about 15 degrees more ridiculous, so that we’re all living out either the fantasy or nightmare version of what a moment like that is,” Cahn says. Sometimes, the wilder you go, the closer you get to the truth.


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    David Canfield

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  • Bears Just Wanna Have Fun, Or: A Tragedy Becomes A Comedy in Cocaine Bear

    Bears Just Wanna Have Fun, Or: A Tragedy Becomes A Comedy in Cocaine Bear

    Elizabeth Banks noted that it might be the movie that could end her career. In contrast, the antics of the eponymous bear in Cocaine Bear have warmed hearts and delighted audiences everywhere. Especially since screenwriter Jimmy Warden was shrewd enough to understand that, with his creative liberties, he could make the fictionalized version of the bear survive the ingestion of roughly seventy-five pounds of cocaine. As Banks phrased it, “This movie could be seen as that bear’s revenge story.” From that angle, there is a certain “humans are assholes” slant to the film, with the unspoken reality being that people are responsible not just for fucking up their own environment, but those of the animal kingdom as well. After all, were it not for the avarice of a man like Andrew C. Thornton II that prompted such motivation to engage in high-risk drug smuggling behavior (particularly in the 80s, when Reagan’s top priority for “protecting” Americans was not AIDS awareness, but the War on Drugs), the black bear in question would have probably lived a long, healthy life.

    The cocaine boom of the 80s wasn’t only a result of Latin American drug cartels (particularly in Pablo Escobar’s Colombia) ramping up production, but rather, a sudden demand for a drug perceived as far more “glamorous” than the likes of hippie-dippy marijuana or LSD. What’s more, coke became a drug deemed worthy of white yuppies like Patrick Bateman who wanted to stay out all night partying (whether or not arbitrary murder was involved was at one’s discretion)/enjoying their overpaid, privileged status. Previously, at its higher cost in the 70s, it was even deemed the “champagne of drugs” by none other than The New York Times Magazine in ’74, laying the groundwork for the surge that was to come in the 80s. By 1985, where Cocaine Bear sets its stage, everyone wanted a piece of that profitable cocaine selling pie. Including the likes of Thornton II, who opens the movie to the tune of Jefferson Starship’s “Jane.” Ostensibly coked out himself, Thornton II (Matthew Rhys) proceeds to toss duffel bag after duffel bag out of a crashing aircraft. He then blows a kiss to the interior of the plane before jumping out of it, only to knock his head against the top of the doorway prior to falling out. In real life, Thornton II was with a partner-in-crime, and dropped the “loads” because it was proving too much weight for the plane to carry. Thornton II also did manage to successfully jump out of the plane without bumping his head, it was just that his parachute failed when he did, instigating a free fall into the driveway of Fred Myers, the eighty-five-year-old man shown in an archival newsclip saying, “You could see that his main chute didn’t open so, I guess his loafers was too much for him.” This refers to Thornton II being found wearing a bulletproof vest and Gucci loafers (a status symbol of the day).

    Before that, Banks shows us the first couple to encounter the resulting effect of Thornton II’s drop, as the coked-up bear attacks. This after Wikipedia is quoted like gospel at the beginning with a title card reads, “Black bears are not motivated by territoriality. They will seldom attack humans in their vicinity.” Black bears on cocaine, of course, are a different story. To further give the audience a sense of what a “menace” coke was to the government’s bid to kibosh its popularity, insertions of PSAs of the day are incorporated after the bear has its first bout of fun (its version of “fun” being not so dissimilar to the aforementioned Bateman’s). This includes the egg in a frying pan one featuring the old chestnut, “This is your brain. This is your brain on drugs” and Paul Reubens a.k.a. Pee-Wee Herman insisting, “It isn’t glamorous or cool or kid stuff” as he holds up a vial for the camera, somehow making it appear all the more seductive. Nancy Reagan adds, “The thrill can kill,” while a rep for the Narcotics Task Force of NYCHA declares, “Smoking crack is like putting a gun in your mouth…and pulling. the. trigger.” No one much heeded any such warnings in the 80s, when nightlife was king, and cocaine its reigning queen. That cocaine’s influence had even managed to infiltrate places like Knoxville, Tennessee and St. Louis, Missouri, the two initial locations the movie points out apart from the Chattahoochee Forest (not a fake name) is a testament to how saturated it had become even in the most “middle-of-the-road” parts of America. Like Chattahoochee, Georgia, where we’re introduced to single mother and nurse Sari (Keri Russell, looking practically the same as her Felicity days) and her preadolescent daughter, Deirdra a.k.a. Dee Dee (Brooklynn Prince, of The Florida Project fame).

    Upon entering Sari’s room to remind her she’ll be working that night, the viewer sees that the most 80s thing about the movie, apart from the cocaine, is Dee Dee’s décor, awash with posters of Depeche Mode, Billy Idol, Cyndi Lauper and Madonna. When Dee Dee says she was okay with her mom picking up some extra shifts before she realized that the real reason she wants to is to be around her current boyfriend, “Ray the Pediatrician,” Sari mentions Ray invited them to Nashville for the weekend to see his band play. That offer is a major “no thanks” to Dee Dee, who, in turn, reminds her mom that they were supposed to “paint the waterfall” this weekend. Presumably, that means going into the forest with a canvas and some paints and pulling a Bob Ross in front of the waterfall in question. But the call of dick is far greater to Sari than making good on that promise, assuring they can paint the waterfall some other weekend. But what Sari doesn’t know is that the call of the falls is greater to Dee Dee than meeting the latest piece in her mom’s never-ending boyfriend smorgasbord.

    In the meantime, Daveed (O’Shea Jackson Jr.), a fixer for St. Louis’ premier drug kingpin, Syd White (Ray Liotta, RIP), has been asked by said employer to recoup the many missing kilos of coke that Thornton II dropped into the forest at a known spot where smugglers are supposed to leave the goods in the event of a plane crash. But more than just that, Syd asks Daveed to take his son, Eddie (Alden Ehrenreich), along for the mission to get his mind off his recently deceased wife, Joan, and to, furthermore, entice him back into the “family business” he left because Joan wanted him to. But, as Syd points out, now that she’s dead, no harm, no foul.

    Among all these moving pieces of plotlines is also a cop named Bob (Isiah Whitlock Jr.) and his co-worker, Officer Reba (Ayoola Smart). Bob follows a lead on the missing cocaine to the forest while Reba stays behind to watch his “fancy” newly-acquired dog, Rosette (a running joke throughout the movie). The cast’s robustness is all in keeping with the need to add “meat” to a plot that’s fairly thin in theory, but that has been “bulked up” (or “Hulked out,” for a more 80s reference) for cinematic purposes. Despite the theoretical challenge of such a feat, Banks, having perfected her own acting chops in this type of absurdist comedy with 2001’s Wet Hot American Summer, seems more at home behind the camera than ever. And, of course, it never hurts to have “character actress Margo Martindale” on your side. In the role of Ranger Liz, keeper of the national park and forest, she manages to find herself in one of the most action-packed scenes featuring the bear chasing an ambulance to the soundtrack of Depeche Mode’s “Just Can’t Get Enough”—the theme song of cocaine’s effects, if ever there was one. That Devo’s Mark Mothersbaugh was responsible for curating Cocaine Bear’s musical selection only adds to a sense of 80s authenticity.

    As all of the divergent characters converge on one another in the same forest for varying reasons (most people involved want the cocaine though), the plot becomes increasingly more outlandish, providing the bear with plenty of prey to attack as it keeps feasting on whatever coke it finds. Among the additional characters is a random trio of friends who call themselves the Duchamps and roam the park randomly knifing people. As Ranger Liz puts it to Sari (who links up with her and a wildlife activist named Peter [Jesse Tyler Ferguson]) while in search of Dee Dee), “Watch your back. Pop-art punks pop up out of nowhere.” And so they do—by stabbing Daveed in one of the park’s public bathrooms. It’s Stache (Aaron Holliday) that Daveed and Eddie wake up after Daveed kicks the shit out of all three of them to ask where he got the brick of cocaine they found on him. From then on out, Stache becomes part of a new trio as they amble through the woods toward the alleged gazebo where the Duchamps hid the drugs.

    Finally arriving at that geographical point in act three, the only thing missing from the denouement is an ultimate escalation wherein the bear goes on its greatest rampage yet against a Colombian cartel also in pursuit of the lost bounty. Alas, the budget wasn’t high enough for such things (and was clearly used primarily on making the bear look as realistic as possible). But, considering how Banks and Warden already turned a molehill of a story into a mountain, one can’t begrudge them too much.

    They always say the truth is stranger than fiction, but, in this case, fiction based on the truth is strangest of all. Not to mention most vindicating of all…for the bear anyway. Whose real-life fate turned out to be even more tragic than just unwittingly OD’ing on cocaine through no fault of its own—no, the bear also had to end up taxidermied and displayed at a mall in Lexington, Kentucky and branded with names like Pablo EscoBear and Cokey the Bear. Perhaps a more effective PSA than anything actually broadcast on TV in the 80s.

    Genna Rivieccio

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