KAOS (Netflix, 2024)
Posted: Sun Sep 01, 2024 11:24 pm
Based on the ads prominently featuring Jeff Goldblum as the only known star in this series, I decided to check out KAOS even though I was also seeing indications that it was going to be an agenda-driven postmodernized mess.
Turns out both are true: 1) Goldblum is delightful and the portrayal of his extended family of gods does lend the series a certain Wes Anderson "look at this quirky squabbling family" vibe but 2) the concept and the execution is dreadful. I am close to noping out after three episodes because of how nonsensical the setting is and how heavy-handed they make the agenda: Suzy Izzard; Antony & the Johnsons; Hippolyta; The Furies; Theseus and Astyanax etc.
But your mileage may vary, so check it out if you like. As for me, it actually makes me long for the likes of American Gods and Ragnarok (I never saw the 3rd season, and I should probably go back and check it out) and even more so for the days of Wonder Woman and Xena when mythology and superheroics were still tied together as genres, and not everything was reduced to political allegories full of narcissistic shallow characterization.
The basic premise of KAOS is that the Greek Gods still rule the Earth in modern times, but they act like modern humans albeit with godlike powers.
I can find so many basic problems with this premise, such as:
- The West developed advanced science because it abandoned paganism and went for universality and rationality. Would the modern world really have all of these technological achievements without the Abrahamics?
- I find it interesting that the show is about Greek gods but they filmed it entirely in Spain and Italy. Is "Krete" a separate country simply because we need it in the story for King Minos, the labyrinth and the minotaur (not shown by EP3, sorry)? Why are Athens and Sparta sidelined, and why are 'Trojans' the token oppressed people when it wasn't Minos who fought the Trojans, it was the Peleponnesian city states on the mainland.
- Why is everyone greeting each other with 'Vero!" when that is LATIN, and I don't see any Romans anywhere. The word for truth in Greek is Aletheia, it's not any harder to say than 'Beltalowda'.
- I'm disappointed that there's so much humor inherent in this 'modern Olympus' scenario, and yet they make almost NO mention whatsoever of modern Greek culture. Supermarkets full of 'Spartan Crunch', and yet feta and spanakopita and grape leaves and ouzo are nowhere to be found?
No traditional Greek dress, nobody singing Rembetika in a smoky bar, no smashing of plates at a wedding, and no influence of classical Greek architecture in all of the buildings? I actually don't even think there's a single actor in the entire series with Greek heritage! (and believe me, the cast is pretty damn diverse for everyone supposedly being Greek)
- Zeus pretty much wears a tracksuit, sometimes with some Elvis-like lightning-bolt motifs. Do Greeks even wear tracksuits? Isn't it a bit hot for that? I thought that was more of a Slavic thing (like the Tracksuit Mafia in the Hawkeye TV show).
I do actually like the fact that the gods' technology is stuck somewhere the 80s, and they don't seem to have computers or cellphones or pretty much anything that looks like futuristic high-tech. Maybe Japan and Silicon Valley doesn't exist in this limited universe.
Anyway, as I said, this mostly just makes me want to go back to Ragnarok Season 3 with actual Scandinavian culture in it. I might still just watch the last episode of KAOS S1 to see if anything important actually happens.
Turns out both are true: 1) Goldblum is delightful and the portrayal of his extended family of gods does lend the series a certain Wes Anderson "look at this quirky squabbling family" vibe but 2) the concept and the execution is dreadful. I am close to noping out after three episodes because of how nonsensical the setting is and how heavy-handed they make the agenda: Suzy Izzard; Antony & the Johnsons; Hippolyta; The Furies; Theseus and Astyanax etc.
But your mileage may vary, so check it out if you like. As for me, it actually makes me long for the likes of American Gods and Ragnarok (I never saw the 3rd season, and I should probably go back and check it out) and even more so for the days of Wonder Woman and Xena when mythology and superheroics were still tied together as genres, and not everything was reduced to political allegories full of narcissistic shallow characterization.
The basic premise of KAOS is that the Greek Gods still rule the Earth in modern times, but they act like modern humans albeit with godlike powers.
I can find so many basic problems with this premise, such as:
- The West developed advanced science because it abandoned paganism and went for universality and rationality. Would the modern world really have all of these technological achievements without the Abrahamics?
- I find it interesting that the show is about Greek gods but they filmed it entirely in Spain and Italy. Is "Krete" a separate country simply because we need it in the story for King Minos, the labyrinth and the minotaur (not shown by EP3, sorry)? Why are Athens and Sparta sidelined, and why are 'Trojans' the token oppressed people when it wasn't Minos who fought the Trojans, it was the Peleponnesian city states on the mainland.
- Why is everyone greeting each other with 'Vero!" when that is LATIN, and I don't see any Romans anywhere. The word for truth in Greek is Aletheia, it's not any harder to say than 'Beltalowda'.
- I'm disappointed that there's so much humor inherent in this 'modern Olympus' scenario, and yet they make almost NO mention whatsoever of modern Greek culture. Supermarkets full of 'Spartan Crunch', and yet feta and spanakopita and grape leaves and ouzo are nowhere to be found?
No traditional Greek dress, nobody singing Rembetika in a smoky bar, no smashing of plates at a wedding, and no influence of classical Greek architecture in all of the buildings? I actually don't even think there's a single actor in the entire series with Greek heritage! (and believe me, the cast is pretty damn diverse for everyone supposedly being Greek)
- Zeus pretty much wears a tracksuit, sometimes with some Elvis-like lightning-bolt motifs. Do Greeks even wear tracksuits? Isn't it a bit hot for that? I thought that was more of a Slavic thing (like the Tracksuit Mafia in the Hawkeye TV show).
I do actually like the fact that the gods' technology is stuck somewhere the 80s, and they don't seem to have computers or cellphones or pretty much anything that looks like futuristic high-tech. Maybe Japan and Silicon Valley doesn't exist in this limited universe.
Anyway, as I said, this mostly just makes me want to go back to Ragnarok Season 3 with actual Scandinavian culture in it. I might still just watch the last episode of KAOS S1 to see if anything important actually happens.