Thursday, July 21, 2011

MI-5's Lucas North, the Character that Pamela Ewing Dreamed.

 I have just finished watching the last episode of MI-5 (Spooks') Season 9 and I'm a bit ticked. (Please take care for the Spoilers that follow and - don't read if you haven't watched through Season 9).
I have no problem admitting that I'm often in over my head with some of the sophisticated and complex Spooks plots. Whenever one doesn't make sense, I always assume its me that can't figure it out and I really don't let it bother me. I have a rather healthy suspension of disbelief. But this time its not about me. This episode has huge plot-holes in it that are not my fault and due to nothing more complex than stretching a storyline too far.

Lucas North's (oh excuse me, John Bateman's) motivations and actions in this episode just don't and can't add up. While Vaughn was alive and blackmailing him, things made sense. The character-formerly-known-as-Lucas was walking a tightrope trying to keep things together --wishing to protect his job and reputation and trying to carve out a life with Maya. This is all fine. But after the threat of blackmail is gone (with the death of Vaughn) and after Harry knows (most of) the real story and Lucas knows his job and reputation are shot, his main motivation hinges on simply escaping somewhere with Maya.

Why in hell wouldn't Lucas have cut a deal with his own country rather than work with the Chinese to whom he has no particular allegiance and who are not providing him anything that others in power couldn't also provide? The Chinese entanglement was Vaughn's deal, not Lucas'; he is too smart to just keep working with them by default. Especially when all the spooks are offering to deal.  It doesn't make sense.
Once his last motivating factor, Maya, is dead, things become even more strange and strained. There is no reason why Lucas would become distraught to know that Albany wasn't a real threat. He was not invested in Albany and didn't even know what it was for much of the episode. His "mission" wasn't to deliver Albany to the Chinese. His mission was to get out of town. He could have been giving them chocolate. He didn't care. Why should he jump off a building when Albany turns out to be useless? It doesn't ring true.

Somebody defending the episode might say, well, he acted unpredictably because his mind was screwed up; he was confused; he wasn't acting out of rational motivations. Fair enough. But, while I think it makes sense for Lucas' options and strategy and even his state of mind to be messed up, there's no reason for his basic driving purpose as a character to be messed up.

And there is no reason for the writers to have changed everything about him that a viewer had the right to rely on. One of the best things about this show has always been its internal consistency with respect to character development. Rugs just don't go getting pulled out from under us. Here they are flying through the air.

...And, if he was so messed up, it just points to another plot flaw: there is no way, in that state of mind, he could have orchestrated (solo) all the sophisticated maneuvers he had going to get Albany from the spooks (the car pre-programmed with directions, the phone that calls only him, the suit of clothes for Harry to switch to, the scanner set-up, the IV drip for Ruth, and on and on). Its too much.

I'm not going to say that Season 9, Episode 8 isn't good TV. Its exciting and heart-thumping and heart-breaking and interesting. But it doesn't feel true to me. It has a flavor of Bobby Ewing showing up in the shower in Dallas rather than being dead. Yes, writers of fiction have wide license. If they want to all of a sudden make someone really alive after all!  they can do it. If they all of a sudden want to make someone really really bad after all!, then they can do that too. But there is no reason to have made Lucas so super duper ultra bad that he was willing to sell out his country for basically no reason... so really ultra bad that he was willing to kill a random stranger, let alone an attempt on a co-worker whom he cared about, trusted and respected. Not when he'd just spent years working his ass off as an agent dedicating his life to protecting his country and countrymen.

And I say all this as someone who is actually quite OK with some level -- a fair level -- of badness in Lucas. It makes sense. He is ambiguous. He has a strange flatness about him into which you can read a variety of things. So I don't mind the writers constructing a past for Lucas that torments him and causes him to become unstable. Its an interesting choice that enlivened this whole series, but by the last episode it was clear to me that they were straining to make it all work. They took a good idea to the wrong place and went too far.

By way of comparison, I enjoyed the way the departure of Tom was handled many many seasons ago . . . it was ever so slightly similar.  Devoted and caring agent just has one little bit more than he can take  and becomes rogue and unstable. There was a great ambiguous ending for him. I'm OK with rogue agents going a bit over the brink or being scarred by a difficult life. I mean, you don't generally go into this line of work if you are and have always been boring and squeaky clean.

The only thing that made the last episode of season 9 bearable was the phenomenal acting from Richard Armitage who almost managed to sell this ridiculous storyline. He reached deep and found a humanity for Lucas, despite these crazy plot twists. His scenes with Ruth, Harry and Maya are all powerful and touching. It was rich when he was advising Ruth to marry Harry. He has an incredible capacity to tap into Lucas' vulnerability.

I'm going to miss Lucas. And I don't see why they needed to blast him to bits before they ousted him. Even Connie got to redeem herself by disarming a nuclear bomb and saving millions of people before she was blasted away.

Spooks has always wooed me willingly along to wherever it wanted to go. And I've always been thrilled by the ride. But I feel jerked around by this ending to the Lucas story.

It might have been better if  Pamela Ewing had just dreamed it all, really.

"MI-5's Lusas North, the Character that Pamela Ewing Dreamed." LostinBritishTV

6 comments:

  1. This is another great post! I wrote a similar one re Lucas as well. I am trying to convince myself that the real Spooks ended in 8.8. Both s9 and 10 really missed the mark for me in the end.

    Spooks has always been a bit silly- but I stuck around for the interesting characters. When the characters are messed with illogically my brain can't sustain that much suspension of disbelief.

    If these new writers weren't stuffing around characters, they were stuffing up their own themes from week to week, and if they weren't doing that, they were busy creating more and more obvious plot holes.

    This series and the next one are a far cry from the heady and wonderful days of s1-4.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Thanks again! You are giving me a lot to think about as to how the show dropped off in quality after s4 and as to how they continually messed with their great characters. These are themes I'll have to give some thought to and maybe write on as well, although right now, I am burned out on Spooks and not wanting to return to it.

    I am just now learning about Livejournal - but I was able find you and look at what you've done over there. Very impressive! Though I couldn't find your Lucas North post you mention. Feel free to link to it in a comment here. You and I share a lot of interests, but you are far more prolific :) So glad you are visiting me on the blog!

    ReplyDelete
  3. I feel that we see popular culture and especially Spooks in much the same way :)

    Here is my blog post on Lucas: http://dweomeroflight.livejournal.com/45465.html#cutid1

    -dweomeroflight

    ReplyDelete
  4. I have only watched the episodes with Rchard Armitage but I see the direction the writers are taking his character and I researched and discovered they kill him. I just cannot watch the remaining episodes. I really enjoyed the excitement of the scripts once Richard became the chief of operations and the humanity Richard displays with his character but I will not watch the final episodes.

    ReplyDelete
  5. I watched Season One when it first aired years ago, and will confess I returned to the show with Season 7 almost entirely for Richard Armitage. Loved his character in Season 7-8 (apart from the silly and unecessary fling with the blond American who was clearly using him), but I could not stand the Season 9 finale.

    I'm glad that I'm not alone in having seen something "off" with the writing in the last two Episodes, especially the character's motivations. Why on earth did Lucas continue with the whole thing after Vaughan died? The Chinese weren't threatening him, and like you say, he was far too smart for that type of thing.

    Why did he suddenly turn around at the end of Episode 7 and start distrusting Harry? Who had literally just given him a chance and returned his firearm to him (literally symbolizing that he STILL considered him to be part of the M1-5 team).

    Harry had no way of finding out the real truth about Dakar (and how did he anyway). This is controversial, but how do we even know it was the truth? Vaughan was the one who said John killed Lucas North, and knew what the bomb was, but he's a manipulator, liar and not a trustworthy source. How do we know that wasn't just one final lie? That he didn't just plant that idea in John's head. As a final form of revenge, perhaps?

    Honestly, Lucas had the worst and probably the most ignominious ending of any major character in the series.
    Even Connie James, who was revealed in the Season 7 finale to have been a Russian Mole for more than 20 years, betrayed dozens of her fellow British spies (including Lucas) and brutally murdered another spook when he discovered her identity (poor Ben!) was given a chance to redeem herself was allowed to go out with dignity and some pride. She diffused tha nuclear warhead and allowed herself to be blown up in the process, rather han letting it decimate half of London.

    What did poor Lucas get, after two series of loyal service, 8 years in Russian Prison and just being a really great, and well beloved character? Snivelling on a roof because the weapon he'd sold out his country and thrown away his career for was worthless, and his girlfriend, who also didn't want him in the end, died?

    Also the "I don't want to go back to prison it will kill me!" line made no sense. You survived 8 years in a prison that would be FAR worse than a British one, and if he did not want to die, why kill himself?
    This is the man who put himself in front of men armed with assault rifles to stop them hurting innocent people. This was the man who was running back into a building that could blow up at any moment at the end of Season 8 because he didn't want to leave Ros behind.

    That was the man who once held back 6 armed Russian operatives (whilst bleeding out from a gunshot wound) just to give his fellow agents a few more minutes to stop millions of people being killed.

    Just don't buy his ending or the events of Season 9 Episode 8 at all. Lucas deserved so much better.

    ReplyDelete
  6. I also had no problem with the element of darkness in Lucas. I mean right at the beginning in the early Episodes of Season 7 there were hints he was working for the Russians as a double agent, and he definately wasn't some prim and proper High Class boy like Adam who probably got hired because of his family connections.
    I didn't even have an issue with his seriously messed up history, nor probable PTSD from those years in a Russian prison.

    Lucas was always a little rough around the edges, and has a tendency to bend the rules to get the job done, even be ruthless at times, however the ending of Season 9 neither made sense nor was it true to his previous characterization.

    He always had a pretty unshakeable moral compass when it came to his duty to his country, protecting innocent people and his fellow agents, however. His selling out the former and turning against the latter for no reason just didn't ring true.

    ReplyDelete