From IMDB:
A financial adviser drags his family from Chicago to the Missouri Ozarks, where he must launder $500 million in five years to appease a drug boss.
From Netflix you can stream two seasons. Each season consists of 10 one-hour episodes. You need to watch both seasons to come to a conclusion of sorts. Conceivably there could be another season.
Before saying anything more let me warn you that this series is very VIOLENT!
In several places I have read that Donald Trump debases everything and everybody he touches. For a step-by-step detailed textbook showing how evil spreads to engulf even the originally most innocent souls, this series will more than suffice. The process of moral debasement portrays at the same time the “Wages of Sin.” Many involved characters receive harsh retribution, most especially the loss of life, love and respect.
Those of you with strong stomachs may well find these episodes captivating for their attention to detail in the plot, excellent dialog, and superb acting. No wonder the series received 9 Emmy award nominations! Personally I was as hooked as I was horrified. Seems I have become very jaded.
Hats off to some remarkable performances:
- “Arrested Development” was my first encounter with Jason Bateman who plays Marty Byrde. In both cases Bateman exudes a somewhat-repressed, matter-of-fact, nerdish comportment. Nothing seems to rattle him. At each shock, after a thoughtful and facially inexpressive pause, during which you can almost hear his brain cells clicking, he manages to smooth talk his way through the crisis. You must wait for almost 20 episodes before you can see his despair.
- Laura Linney, who plays Marty’s wife Wendy Byrde constantly flashes the always beautiful smile that launches a thousand crimes. After a while I finally realized that for the most part Wendy is one of the most evil characters. Here I am reminded of Hannah Arendt’s phrase “the Banality of Evil”. One rationalization leads to another.
- Julia Garner, who plays Ruth Langmore, turns in a bravo performance as a “white trash” daughter of a convicted criminal. Ruth’s character, while never innocent, grows to recognize the lowness of her given state in life and does mature to rise above and take responsibility. Her improvement owes much to the fact that she was born with a very intelligent mind.
Assuming you can get through the first stomach-churners, you may well become as addicted as was I.