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(7,572 posts)Kevin Spacey is not believable in this role. Francis Urquart in the original British series was so deliciously wicked, he cannot be matched by Spacey.
Britethorn
(1,488 posts)I was never able to really get into the original BBC version, but the Netflix one grabbed my right away, and I like Spacey's Underwood performance quite a bit. But the writing sure is going downhill lately. . .
Tx4obama
(36,974 posts)Caution: The 'full article' below is based on the 'full series' - but the 'excerpt' below is related to the video above.
Netflixs House of Cards Thinks Its Tough, But It Goes Easy On Washington
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Its difficult for me to take seriously any critique of Washington that is so enamored, whether that was Willimons intention or not, with one of the ugliest parts of our political culture, and one of the most substance-free elements of our political journalism. And part of whats odd about watching House of Cards journalism subplots is the extent to which the show believes its being awfully tough on Washington political reporters, when actually its letting them off relatively easy. Its meant to be shocking when Zoe, who we meet as a young reporter at the Washington Herald, offers herself up to Frank as a mouthpiece, promising to print anything he feeds her, no questions asked. But the show, which generates friction between Zoe and her editor Tom, by suggesting that hed be resistant either to blogging or to Zoes cable news-facilitated rise, is years out of date when it comes to either Zoes mode of reporting or Washington journalisms approach to the internet. In 2013, when House of Cards is set, the Washington Post, which the Washington Herald is a clear stand-in for, has built a publication-within-a-publication around first-generation blogger Ezra Klein, given Alexandra Petri, a woman about Zoes age, a humor blog, and hired Max Fisher to blog about foreign affairs. In one of the most risible moments in the show, Frank tells Zoe that she shouldnt go to television because shes more than a talking head. If I were to say Politico wanted to hire me, what would you say? she asks him. That would pique my interest, Frank tells her, suggesting it would be more substantial than working as a correspondent for CBS. The show seems entirely unaware that in real life, Politico has regularly been accused of practicing precisely the kind of speedy, quid-pro-quo journalism that Zoe is meant to be exceptionally guilty of practicing.
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Full article here: http://thinkprogress.org/alyssa/2013/02/05/1535931/house-of-cards-netflix/
SharonAnn
(13,776 posts)And I love Kevin Spacey as Frank Underwood. He can be charming one minute and change to ruthless the next.
Is it like reality? Heck, I don't know. maybe, maybe not.
But i found that I couldn't "watch just one" of the episodes at a time. Several nights of staying up way past midnight and I've finished the series. It was worth the lack of sleep.
sulphurdunn
(6,891 posts)It seems the theme all the way through is that power here is a winner take all blood sport run by and for the benefit of greedy, power mad sociopathic assholes. Sadly, there's a lot in real life to suggest that.
SciFiRK
(65 posts)if this is really believable, but the main gist of the story is Frank creating scenarios for the effects he wants. I did see the BBC version and this is every bit as good.