The Man in the High Castle, by Philip K. Dick, is an
acknowledged classic of the alternative-history genre — the sort of
books that imagine a world in which something important had gone
differently. (In this case, it’s if the Axis powers had won World War
II.) The TV show of the same title, whose pilot is currently streaming
on Amazon, is unlikely to meet as much success, not least because the
alternative-history genre of TV isn’t something that exists. In general,
TV has been uniquely bad at conveying dystopian fantasies. So far, The Man in the High Castle is worse than it could be — but it’s hard to call it a disappointment, given how low expectations should have been.
The power of books that imagine the apocalypse (or a far worse
alternate present) is their power to parcel out information about the
state of the world we’re witnessing through context. When television
attempts to do the same, it feels sledgehammer-level unsubtle. In a
book, a mention of a popular current movie or song, or a quick
description of a poster or work of art, can be easily absorbed in the
flow of information. In Amazon’s Man in the High Castle pilot,
when the camera pauses on a movie theater marquee or poster of a Third
Reich soldier, it feels as though we’re being nudged in the ribs: This will be important later! The important stuff that’s actually
interesting gets withheld to a frustrating degree, in favor of fairly
dull characters who are on quests we don’t get enough information about
to care. What would it really be like to live under Nazi rule in
America? We don’t get a strong sense, aside from a vague feeling that
the police would be far more aggressive.
Subtlety isn’t television’s strongest trait, but shows like The Man in the High Castle,
which exist in a wildly different universe than our own, only
exacerbate the medium’s problems with obviousness. We want to know how
America ended up overrun with German and Japanese soldiers — just as
how, in Under the Dome, we want to know how the town ended up under a dome, or how in the late ABC reboot of V we
wanted to know the alien’s plots. Those last two shows are but two easy
examples of an irritating phenomenon: when they did parcel out
information about the world in which their characters found themselves,
it was heavy-handed in a way that only emphasized how much the rest of
the show was wheel-spinning.
In The Man in the High Castle, the popular movies and songs
of Nazi-controlled America are lingered upon, as though they’ll be
important later. The mechanics of a bus trip to a free zone are
straightforwardly stated by a character whose function is largely pure
exposition. But the mechanics of how the Germans and Japanese conquered
and then divided America are easily hopscotched over. TV can give very
obvious information very quickly, through exposition. What it can only
do far more effortfully and over a longer period of time is convey a
complex society very different from our own. With characters as
schematic as the ones in High Castle and a plot so reliant on shoulder-tapping obviousness, it’s hard to imagine tuning in for that long.
What would make the show more watchable in the long run? The twist at
the end of the pilot is a good sign: Prior to that, the characters had
behaved exactly as we might expect them to. The central question of this
show hinges upon a collision between American and Third Reich ways of
life, so giving us characters who are morally compromised or hazily
in-between — rather than, as many are, firmly situated on one side or
the other in an intractable war — will allow the ideas of the show to
reach their potential.
Only the first episode is available, so far, which is exactly the
wrong amount; those characters who are on one or the other side seem
just like chess pieces waiting to play their part in the drama, thanks
to how little we know. The lack of information about the most
interesting aspect of High Castle, its bizarre geopolitical
setting, isn’t tantalizing. It’s a reminder that the show isn’t, yet,
getting down to the business of showing us what its world is really like
and how it got that way.
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