Sometimes we need a little dark humor in our lives
HBO's The Brink
Once in a while a dark comedic film or TV series comes along
and not only piques the public's interests, but resonates with the culture. Whoever
could forget films like Stanley Kubrick's Dr.
Strangelove which mocked the 1960s arms race or how Mel Brooks' The Producers took on one of history's worst tragedies and
mocked it in musical form? On television around that era in the late 1960s, it
was Hogan's Heroes that took on the
subject of prisoners of war and made a sitcom out of that tragic situation.
Making a comedic musical or a sitcom out of World War II?
Sometimes I think about that and wonder how did they produce those projects
without protesters shouting from the public squares? Oh yes, I'm sure that
there were plenty who were offended with Hogan's
Heroes and wrote the network and called their switchboards back in the day,
but the program lasted from 1965-1971, so most of the U.S. (and later the
world) never had a problem with the show.
In my estimation, humor needs to be employed to deal with
tragedy. Indeed, the producers of The
Producers and Hogan's Heroes are
not insensitive. Rather, they used humor as a way to explain, reflect and perhaps
learn from history's horrors in a different way. It's called dark humor and sometimes we need
it to make sense of ugly situations.
In my department, modern
day dark humor took off after the late
1960s. After Hogan's Heroes, MASH came along on the same network. For
those not "in the know," MASH stands
for Mobile Army Surgical Hospital and is based on doctors serving in the Korean
War. The television series was based on the film of the same name and directed
by Robert Altman. Altman took on dark humor by successfully juxtaposing tragedy
and comedy. The TV series captured that mixture, but not quite in the same way.
MASH the TV series seemed to be toned
down from the Altman film by not being nearly as bloody in the operating room
scenes. In its early years, America was still embroiled in the Vietnam War, but
stuck with Altman's idea and used the Korean War as a parallel to depict the
horrors of war through dark humor. As MASH
the TV show aged, it became less of a sitcom and more of a "dramedy."
Flash forward to the present and we have HBO's The Brink. Again, the audience is
treated to dark humor sans laugh
track. In my opinion, why did networks insist on those laugh tracks for Hogan's Heroes and MASH? I'm wondering if there's any way those shows could be re-mastered
to Blu-Ray minus the laugh tracks. I'm certain those shows' producers and
directors did not want those laugh tracks. Anyway, The Brink puts dark humor on steroids. The show skewers our
modern-day "War on Terror" by depicting a cast of bumbling characters
who are putting their nation's security at risk through their own selfishness
and incompetence. From Foreign Service officer (Jack Black) who bumbles his way through
Islamabad to the heavy drinking/womanizing Secretary of State Walter Larson
(Tim Robbins), The Brink makes a
humorous situation out of current events and the state of humanity these days. The Brink is dark comedy at its best. The cast is nicely rounded out with comedic actor Aasif Mandvi and rising actor Pablo Schreiber.
Dark comedy is always challenging so it comes with risk.
Just like in the late 1960s, I'm sure that there are plenty of folks out there
who have a problem with The Brink.
Yes, one could tell those people to lighten up, but most likely that will not
happen. I think Mel Brooks once said a gentleman went up to him saying that he
served in WWII and was disenchanted with The
Producers. Brooks said that he served as well and asked the man why he
didn't see him in the war. Let's face, we can't please everyone. At the moment,
I'm not hearing any outcry about The Brink,
so maybe it shows that we have come a long way.
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