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Linda Holmes: 我认为《Zero Day》是一部很糟糕的剧集,主要原因有两个。首先,它未能成功地将政治惊悚元素与政治现实有效结合,剧中人物的政治立场模糊不清,缺乏真实感,所有人物都围绕着拯救国家和解决‘零日’事件展开,刻意回避任何具体的政治立场,显得虚假。其次,该剧集整体质量较差,中间部分情节拖沓,很多情节是多余的,可以压缩到更少的集数。剧中一些角色的戏份过多,但对主线剧情贡献不大,这可能是因为流媒体平台的播出模式以及需要服务众多实力派演员的缘故。该剧集缺乏必要的结局,很多情节线索没有得到解决,导致观众时间浪费。 Eric Deggans: 我对《Zero Day》的评价较为中肯。我喜欢这部剧集的一些元素,例如以一位年长角色为中心的故事设定,以及剧集开头和结尾的精彩之处。但是,该剧集对主角精神状态的处理含糊不清,暗示了可能受到精神控制,但并未明确给出答案,这可能是为了给续集留下伏笔。此外,该剧集节奏缓慢,情节拖沓,可能是因为流媒体平台的播出模式所致。剧中一些情节是多余的,可以压缩到更少的集数。 剧中演员阵容强大,但一些角色的戏份安排可能与剧集制作的幕后原因有关,例如需要服务众多实力派演员。安吉拉·贝塞特饰演的总统角色戏份不多,发挥空间有限,如果主演并非罗伯特·德尼罗,她可能无法出演该角色。 剧集对调查委员会拥有非常大权力的设定,以及对酷刑的使用,缺乏明确的立场。对主角的动机和立场处理含糊不清,未能明确主角的行为是出于个人意愿还是受到控制。剧中对主角妻子对主角行为的看法处理不足。 剧中乔治·穆伦: 我郑重承诺,我们将仅在绝对必要时才使用这些权力。

Deep Dive

Chapters
The Netflix series Zero Day starts with a massive cyberattack that briefly shuts down the US. The show follows a retired president leading an investigation, but its pacing and unresolved plot points leave viewers wanting more.
  • Massive cyberattack cripples US systems.
  • Robert De Niro plays a retired president leading the investigation.
  • Pacing issues and unresolved plot points are criticized.

Shownotes Transcript

Translations:
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The Netflix series Zero Day begins with a terrifying moment in which everything in the United States goes briefly offline. Power, internet, banking systems, transportation systems, everything.

Thousands of people die, and even after everything is restored, a widespread panic leads to a government investigation of who did it. With a cast headed by Robert De Niro and Angela Bassett, the show hopes to be a paranoid political thriller for our times. I'm Linda Holmes, and today we're talking about Zero Day on Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR.

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Joining me today is NPR's TV critic, Eric Deggans. Hello, Eric. I'm so glad I have you here to go over this with me. I know. I know. It's super complicated, but hopefully we'll figure it out together. Yeah, we'll figure it out together. We'll figure it out. So in Zero Day, Robert De Niro plays beloved former President George Mullen. He's appointed the head of the Zero Day Commission after a deadly cyber attack, and he must find out who did it and prevent it from happening again.

I do not render judgment on the extent of the powers I have been granted. They are unprecedented, as is this danger. But I do offer you my solemn vow. We will only employ them insofar as they are absolutely necessary.

Also in the cast, which is large and impressive, Angela Bassett as the current president, Lizzie Kaplan as George's daughter, who's also a member of Congress, Jesse Plemons as George's longtime right-hand man, Connie Britton as George's aide and former paramour, Joan Allen as his faithful wife, Matthew Modine as the Speaker of the House, and Gabby Hoffman as a shadowy tech mogul. What

What they're going for here is a political thriller where you're not sure who to trust out of all these people. Zero Day is streaming now on Netflix. Eric, I think you, like I, come into a political thriller thinking, I want this to work for me. How did this work for you? I have to say, I didn't like it as much as I wanted to.

And there were elements of it that I really did like. There were parts of the story that I thought were interesting. I'm a sucker for political thrillers, so I was really hoping to see more, I guess, political thriller here. Yeah.

And I was intrigued by the idea of centering the whole story on Robert De Niro's character, who's a retired president, is an older character than we see in a lot of these thrillers. And, you know, most of his challenges are mental. You know, he's having problems with perhaps his cognition.

And it's hard to tell if he has access to something that is communicating to him special information on what is actually happening here or whether he's slowly losing his mind. I guess I would call it a flirtation with mind control. Yes. Similar to kind of what you see in Winter Soldier and that strand of the Marvel movies of like, is someone controlling him remotely with triggering of some kind? Yeah.

But my sense is like they don't really decide what they want to do about that. So you get this like, is it mind control? Is it dementia? Is it just that he... Was under some serious stress. Yeah. And they don't seem to want to decide...

about that. You always wonder if some of this is sort of the result of our current streaming universe, where when people write these things, they have no idea whether there'll be another one. Yeah. You know, maybe that's their way of leaving the door open. If we leave the door open with some questions about what happened to George Mullen, maybe there's a way to keep the story going. That's what I was wondering every time I ran into a situation where they didn't resolve things. And there are several situations here where they don't resolve things. Yeah. Yeah.

You know, I have seen things on television that I liked less than this, but not in a while. So this is where Linda is less nice than Eric. I really thought this was very bad. And I thought it was bad in two primary ways. One of which is, I don't know that you can make a political thriller that is about political acts like signing laws, holding commissions, making reports, etc.

and be as resolute as these people are about never suggesting what the substantive politics of any of these people are. It's not just that they don't say who's a Republican and who's a Democrat.

They don't really give anybody any substantive politics about anything other than we all want to save the country and solve zero day. It is not that I need it to be a partisan piece. That's not what I'm saying. But it is so phony to me because they are so carefully going around and making sure that nobody can ever be identified with any particular political position that it all feels...

incredibly fake. And that includes, you know, one of the people that I didn't mention in the intro is Dan Stevens, who plays what I would call a wing podcaster. You cannot really tell whether he is a left wing podcaster or a right wing podcaster. He is just a wing. He seems pretty much in the Alex Jones, Glenn Beck kind of. I don't know, man. I don't know.

And I think they want you not to know. And so... Well, they're not explicitly identifying what party he aligns with, but everything about visually about how they present him. I agree with you. But I think there are places where they try to make it possible that he's kind of a left wing guy. Yeah.

who just operates with similar signifiers. My point is, this is what I mean when I say it all gets very labored to me because they're trying so hard to avoid any actual political relevance. I have to say that was the one thing that always brought me up short when I would watch The West Wing.

Is that, you know, the partisanship that we are struggling with now was starting to emerge when that show was on the air. And they, the West Wing existed in a world where that partisanship was not distorting politics, even to the extent that it was doing it in that moment. And so there were a lot of times when they had political crises that they would resolve that would never happen in real life and felt like a fairy tale. Right.

And I was just going to say, we're seeing that here to the nth degree. That's what I mean. I think you're absolutely right. And it's like, this is that, but more, more, more, more, more. However, yes, I have these issues with the way it handles politics. I also just think it's a bad show. You get through the first episode, which is pretty decent as a thriller opening where they set up this terrible situation and the guy's got to sort of answer the call from retirement and all that stuff.

And then I think you don't really need to watch any of it until about the fifth episode. That's what I was going to say. It starts interesting and the ending was interesting. The middle part. I think the ending, I didn't like the ending. I think the ending is very, very, very silly. And the resolution of what was the motivation for this attack is absurd. Mm-hmm.

However, at least stuff starts to happen. And the entire middle part, maybe episodes two through four-ish, are really just a series, I think, of red herrings and a bunch of stuff that's not going to be important, including that entire Dan Stevens thing, which is not really necessary. You don't need it. You could have made this whole thing a movie, I think, and probably retained most of what is potentially fun about it.

I do want to ask you about this cast. How did you feel about the way they used this cast? Well, you know, Angela Bassett's playing the president. She doesn't get to do much, except occasionally say stern things to Robert De Niro. We have no clue here and no time to spare.

We need an entity with all the powers of every law enforcement and intelligence agency put together operating on American soil. Well, she has like imported Angela Bassett authority that she brings to that part. I think if anybody other than Robert De Niro were starring in this show, there's no way she would have played that part. They would have had to get somebody who's not as famous and not as accomplished to do that.

Jesse Plemons, we got then Jesse Plemons, which is, you know, he looks great in this role. But I think what you were talking about in terms of the pacing of the show is also what I, you know, have come to call streamer-itis. Yeah. It is hard for people...

people who are greenlighting these shows for streamers to figure out how to pace series sometimes. And you'll be watching one and you'll get the sense, man, they could have told this in three episodes or four episodes. You know, why is it eight? Yeah. Or why is it seven or whatever? And, you know, I definitely had that sense with this one is that they felt like there was a lot of stuff in there.

sort of designed to stretch out the story and keep people engaged over multiple episodes when they could have done this, you know, it would have been nice to see them do it in maybe three episodes. I wouldn't say that it was a, you know, tight enough to be a movie. And I'll also push back just a little bit and say, if you remember what the country was like in the wake of 9-11. I do get that. And I do think that's fair. We were in a very different time. And I think

Just to fill in the holes a little bit. So Robert De Niro's character is a retired president who is still very beloved and has a lot of credibility with the American people. This awful cyber attack happens and everyone's concerned that it can happen again. So they form a commission to try and get to the bottom of what happened. And they are given extraordinary investigative powers. They are allowed to imprison people without permission.

without any kind of due process, really, and press suspects until they get whatever information they want out of them. Using torture. And I think they try to justify that by positing that the nation is in the same place that it was in the wake of 9-11, where people were willing to sign off on something like the Patriot Act. I think you're right that there's something here that could feel effective. It's just I think the show is very reluctant to have...

point of view, and I don't necessarily mean a political partisan point of view. I just mean, like, does Mullen have a point of view about these things? Because I think there are times when he seems to want to take advantage of these extraordinary powers. And then there are times when they suggest maybe he's taking advantage of these extraordinary powers because he's being mind controlled. And to me, that's like rather relevant to how I feel about the character and to kind of chicken out of

like yes or no to, is it part of his makeup that he wanted to do this to people and have these powers and flex these powers? Or was it because of mind control? Like to me, you can't kind of like, maybe who can say like you, you can say you wrote the show. And another option is just that he was being in some way, either it was happening to him naturally or it was happening.

Sure. Sure. Right. And there's a moment where his wife, played by Joan Allen, who also I think it's not nearly enough to do here, they're talking about like the potential for his mind to be affected by different things, medication, maybe it's micro or whatever.

And she says something about makes you feel like you want to be a fascist. It causes memory loss, temporary confusion. How about a sudden affinity for fascism? Is that on the list? That's what this is about? You can't just like throw that out and then kind of never deal again with the fact that his wife feels this way about what he's doing. I do think that I held this to a higher standard because this is the kind of thing I like. I like political thrillers. I think with a thriller,

you got to provide some resolution. There are a bunch of different things that they kind of throw out there and they don't do a lot with. And I thought, well, why is this even here? The other thing is with a show like this, because there's so much A-level talent in it, they all have to have something to do. And one reason why, you know, Dan Stevens' part was probably as big as it was is because Dan Stevens was playing that character. Yeah. Right? Right.

And so you have to give him some stuff to do or he's not going to want to do this show. So he got a lot of stuff to do that ultimately didn't matter very much to the main storyline. And who knows, maybe there was some version of this where all that stuff he went through was much more integral. Who knows? But I do think that when you have Angela Bassett and Jesse Plemons and Connie Britton

and Bill Camp and Dan Stevens and Gabby Hoffman and Clark Gregg, when you've got all those people that you have to service, there's no way you can give them all great scenes and do that in three or four episodes. So I think there's a lot of show busy behind the scenes reasons. I was going to say, Eric is always bringing the show business reality to bum me out about why I can't have what I want. Because I spend so much time talking to these people. I know you do. And I have a lot of friends who are writers.

who worked in broadcast and now are pitching to streamers. And what they constantly tell me is that the streaming services, the people in charge, don't necessarily have a great grasp of how to make television. And they are constantly pushing them to delay payoff moments in episodes from the first episode back to maybe the third or fourth episode because their main goal is to get people to watch as many episodes in one sitting as possible. And the result for the viewer is that you're watching episodes

episodes where nothing of real import happens. And you're constantly wondering, should I be paying attention to that? I mean, especially in a thriller, you're paying attention to every little note because

because you don't know which detail is actually going to mean something in the end. You want everything to matter. That's the satisfaction is you want everything at the end to go chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, chick, and kind of fall into place together. Exactly. And so when there's padding and you're paying attention to a bunch of things that ultimately don't matter, you get towards the end of the season run and you start to feel like you wasted your time as a viewer. And I think that is a big problem for zero day.

You know, neither one of us big fan of Zero Day, but Robert De Niro remains Robert De Niro. We want to know what you think about Zero Day. Find us at Facebook.com slash PCHH. That brings us to the end of our show. Eric Deggans, thank you so much for being here. It is always a pleasure. Oh, thank you so much. And, you know, watch Day of the Jackal on Peacock. That's a much better thriller. There you go. There you go.

This episode is produced by Hafsah Fathima and Liz Metzger and edited by Mike Katziff. Our supervising producer is Jessica Reedy. Hello, Come In provides our theme music. Thank you for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. I'm Linda Holmes, and we'll see you all tomorrow.

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