I recently got Amazon Prime, and The Last Tycoon was one of the shows that caught my attention the most. Tycoon was released in 2017 to mixed reviews, with many put off by the stagey dialogue and over-the-top social commentary.
Although these criticisms are somewhat valid, I would tend to defend this adaptation against being just “all flash and no substance.” The show is enjoyable and has a great deal going for it, especially strong performances across the board.
Based on the unfinished F. Scott Fitzgerald novel of the same name, the series captures the anxious feeling of the original work and of the Depression Era. The novel draws on the author's experiences as a screenwriter in Hollywood. It's worth noting that, in a sense, the book was the product of Fitzgerald's personal failure, as hr managed to get a gand total of one of his scripts made into a film.
Kelsey Grammer plays Pat Brady, the self-made founder of Brady American, a fictional movie studio. Compared to the original novel, the show focuses on the complex relationship beween movie mogul Brady and his protege Monroe Stahr, played by Matt Bomer. Brady is a self-made man who gives Stahr, also of more humble origins, a chance. One of the real strengths of the show is how this relationship is introduced and slowly revealed, with both more personal and political dimensions coming into play. On one hand, there is no denying that they see one another much like father and son, but on the other hand there is a very real tinge of the ethnic tension that was such a major part of immigrant America.
Having watched the first episode, there is no denying that the show definitely veers into some cringey editorializing, especially when it comes to a few scenes depicting homelessness and the proliferation of shantytowns during the Depression. Nevertheless, the series manages to tie together feeling and politics of the day, the storyline, and Fitzgerald's classic themes. Even though I liked the show, there were some moments that felt like I was watching a middling BBC period piece. Despite this, the series conveys Fitzgerald's basic theme of the emptiness of the American Dream with the personal relationship between the two main characters in a skillful way. Sure, this Last Tycoon might be substantially different from original in terms of plot, but it works as an adaptation. It captures the spirit of the original.
I'm a firm believer that some things just work and it's hard to explain why. Sure, there is some Mad Men-style gratuitious sex and it definitely feels like you are getting hit over the head with the subplots about the rise of fascism. However, in this series, we have the adaptation of an unfinished novel, full of promise, but which is at the same time a nominal failure. This makes the flaws much easier to overlook. Fitzgerald is supposed to be pretentious, anyway!
Overall Grade: B
Amazon Prime Series
Creator: Billy Ray
Stars: Matt Bomer, Kelsey Grammer, Lily Collins
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