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#1 | |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,545
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http://www.slate.com/id/2293600/
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#2 |
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Member
Forum Idol
Join Date: Jan 09, 2001
Posts: 124,545
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Depending on whom you ask, Dynasty in its first season was a show about class structure (the oil rich, the middle class, the servant class) and about outsiders in conflict with those privileged few. In effect, the core theme from that first season was of absolute power and how it corrupts absolutely.
Dynasty when it first started in 1981, was likely a product of TV writing that was still situated somewhat in '70s storytelling, where social issues were at the forefront. But by the second season, Dynasty for better or worse, became decidedly more soapy to attract a bigger audience. In return, it found a niche in the more popular mainstream. But with the more campy direction that they chose, we along the way, got one-note black/white characterization, and superficial soapy plots, where the rich was heroic and the beautiful was the norm. In a sense, the very cruel reality which was a consistent dark undercurrent of the more cerebral first season was disregarded completely for fantasy and illusion. It basically at the end of the day, sacrificed story and substance for style and sensationalism. To give better you an idea regarding the change in characterizations post-Season 1, the earthy and ephemeral outsider that was Krystle in the first season became the cardboard cut-out blonde sky goddess of the rest of the series; the frightening and very complex villain that Blake was in the first season became the heroic and principled knight in shining armor that was an extension of TV's classic Bachelor Father; Fallon was watered down to give room for a more sensational villainous to grow (her more soapy mother Alexis). In a nutshell, any outsider that represented what was real in the TV audience was written out and only the neurotic was kept (a perfect example of this is Claudia, who unrealistically became a permanent house-guest and later a Carrington herself). The outside world was kept from view from the TV viewer as the show became more and more claustrophobic, reduced to the privileged class's opulent fantasy domain. |
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