A student's look into the world of cinema and all its elements.



Friday, February 26, 2016

Let’s Talk: Louis CK’s Horace and Pete is television’s best show



The trio of Steve Buscemi, Louis CK, and Edie Falco in Horace and Pete

Thoughts on the beautiful and unique new Louis CK show Horace and Pete just as soon I water down your boos to save some money…

“I don’t feel good Maggie”
 -Horace

It was four Saturdays ago when Louis CK became the Beyoncé of television and dropped a little show entitled Horace and Pete. All of a sudden there was just an episode sitting there on his website with no build up, promotion or anything really that goes with the release of a new television show. It was a present surprise to see it arrive in all of it’s $5 glory, especially given how much I love his FX show Louie and stand up. What Horace and Pete was has been an even bigger surprise as Louis CK delivered a show that wasn’t really funny at all. Instead the first episode was essentially Louis CK’s version of a dramatic play filmed for television. It was an awesome shock to the system and a beautiful amalgamation of what seemed like a bunch of Louis CK’s pent up dramatic ideas dumped out into this new format.

What has made Horace and Pete something special though has been what the series has been able to accomplish post the initial surprise. Every week Louis CK has presented something different and equally as satisfying. The second episode was for all intents and purposes a free form jazz like venture through various bits of comedy and drama exploring everything from breast cancer to disturbing sex fantasies. The third episode, which essentially revolved around a single conversation was one of the most extraordinary hours of television I’ve ever witnessed (more on that in a minute). Finally, this week’s fourth episode felt like a multi cam episode of Louie just with three different sketches instead of two. The joy of Horace and Pete is not knowing how and what one is going to get week by week and just watching Louis CK be creative in this new medium is fascinating.

The chief example of the unique creativity of the show is in its brilliant third episode which is pretty much just a single conversation. The episode opens on a just over nine minute still shot of theater actress Laurie Metclaf as she’s telling a strange and super detailed story. As the story progresses the details become painfully clear, Metclaf is playing Horace’s ex wife Sarah who is telling the story of how she has cheated on her new husband just as Horace had cheated on her in their prior relationship. The conversation is stunning on a number of levels, first of all it’s essentially one giant monologue carried by Metclaf. It’s one of the single best bits of acting I’ve seen in a long time, Metclaf is not only required to tell an incredibly complex story in a realistic fashion but must do it all in incredibly long takes. It’s truly extraordinary to watch the camera just linger, hanging on the pain behind of every word.

The third episode also allows Louis CK the writer and director to shine brightly. While Metclaf has to do a lot of heavy work on the acting side, it can’t be forgotten how important the creativity of Louis CK plays in throughout the hour. The direction is careful, still, and calculated allowing both Metclaf and Louis CK the actor time to let the story slowly build, and for the audience to linger on the conversation's implication. The conversation itself is also incredibly well written, not only striking a tone of realism, but constantly adding twists and turns to continuously build the conversation to a beautiful climax. It makes the moment when Uncle Pete comes in at the end to crack the cruel joke at the end of the episode hit hard. There was definitely laughter to the idea that Louis CK could have created this incredible hour of television as an elaborate set up to a cruel punchline, but the uncomfortably long, silent shot of Horace that follows is a reminder of the pain that was felt throughout the hour. The range of emotions one is left with at the end of the episode is a perfect example of all the elements of filmmaking coming together to create something rather extraordinary. Horace and Pete’s third episode is truly an hour of television I will never forget.

It’s follow up and the most recent episode of the show, while not as extraordinary as its predecessor, continues the creative hot streak that Louis CK continues to strike with this show. The episode revolves around three skits that almost could have come right out of Louie. The first, and weakest of the skits revolves around the show’s weakest aspect as a whole, which is the discussion of current events. The abortion discussion depicted is slightly more successful than previous attempts made to cover current events and politics, as it is much funnier and revolves around the theme of the rest of the episode, but it still doesn’t connect the same way the rest of the show does. While it is funny to listen to a send up of a bunch of older guys talk about the intricacies whether an aborted fetus ends up going to hell (all while ignoring the woman sitting right next to them) it dose not have the same resonance as the rest of the show and can ultimately feel out of place.

Despite its lesser opening third the fourth episode (come on Louis CK we really need episode titles) of Horace and Pete manages to return to greatness for its final two thirds. The episode’s examination of different forms of love worked beautifully. Horace’s interaction (lets not call it a booty call) with the young waitress Maggie (played by yet another theatre actress Nina Arianda) continued the show’s knack for getting theatre actresses to deliver great monologues. 

The best moment of the episode though comes in its final little sketch in which Uncle Pete and Steve Buscemi Pete have a strange father, son bonding moment. While Uncle Pete’s views and ideas have been made to look outdated and ridiculous throughout the show his final moment in which he describes what he believes to be love is as tender and vulnerable as the character gets. It's a scene that shows just how deep a character that Uncle Pete can be, even as there is natural temptation to make him a stereotype. Uncle Pete may, in many people’s eyes, be wrong about the power relations involved in going down on a woman (that’s as far as I’ll go) but the moment when he’s acknowledging his son really for the first time to tell him what love really is, before walking out of the door (with yet another beautiful lingering shot to accompany it) is another example of the emotional power that Horace and Pete has been able to achieve over its mere four week existence.

Horace and Pete has quickly established itself as television’s most unique and powerful show. Louis CK continues to surprise, delivering episodes that span genres and deal with painful situations with the amount of care that is often not seen on television. I do not know what Louis CK’s future episodes of Horace and Pete will bring, all I know is that I cannot wait for the email informing me of a new episode enter my inbox.

Some other musings:

  • I’m going to try and cover this show in some form or fashion weekly from now until the season is over… No promises on timeliness but I love this show too much to let it slip through the cracks…

  • Alan Alda has been so very fantastic as Uncle Pete throughout the four episodes… It’s a different kind of role for him and he’s playing it to perfection.

  • Louis CK has established such great cast its astounding… And a Paul Simon original song! It would be interesting to hear the story of how he pulled all of this off...

That’s just me though. What does everyone else think?

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