It comes down to the problem I spotted a few episodes ago: There’s an artlessness to the way this show discusses mental illness, and by extension the human condition. Think of exchanges like this:
Owen: “My mind, it doesn’t work right.”
Annie: “No one’s does.”
Or this:
Owen: “Annie, why are you here?”
Annie: “Because I’m your friend, and that’s what friends do.”
Or think of Owen describing his dilemma: “The same thing happens every time I meet someone, or get close to someone. I mess it up.”
Have all of us thought or said things like this? Yes, and that’s just it: All of us have thought or said things like this. What do we need Maniac for?
If you feel some kind of frisson from hearing actors on a Netflix-prestige show recite vanilla aphorisms about what life is like for people like you, fine, great, cool.
For me? It’s like reading one of those lovely Richard Scarry books for kids, where the little animal people in overalls and jaunty hats drive around a town where everything is labeled: “car,” “street,” “firehouse,” “hat,” “overalls.” It’s a My First Sony version of insight, rounding off all the hard edges of the psychological forces that drive and derange us until they’re so user-friendly that they represent no challenge at all to address or intake.
I reviewed the finale of Maniac for Decider. It wasn’t a good show.
Tags: decider, maniac, reviews, TV, TV reviews
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