DAVID BIANCULLI

Founder / Editor

ERIC GOULD

Associate Editor

LINDA DONOVAN

Assistant Editor

Contributors

ALEX STRACHAN

MIKE HUGHES

KIM AKASS

MONIQUE NAZARETH

ROGER CATLIN

GARY EDGERTON

TOM BRINKMOELLER

GERALD JORDAN

NOEL HOLSTON

 
 
 
 
 
Thumping Trump with ‘American Horror Story: Cult’
September 5, 2017  | By Ed Bark  | 2 comments
 

Donald Trump’s election is the super-scary, aggressively unsubtle tipping point in FX’s seventh incarnation of American Horror Story (Tues., 10 p.m ET).

One principal character is revisited by paralyzing anxieties while another is emboldened to use Trump’s impending presidency to his own grisly advantage against a backdrop of Charles Manson-esque murders in a smallish Michigan city.

Oh, Hollywood, you’ve done it again with American Horror Story: Cult. Trump’s “base” is invited to take offense and the Tweeter-In-Chief might well lead the RSVPs. This is so even though a previous president’s famously timeless warning seems more to the point. “The only thing we have to fear is fear itself,” said Franklin Delano Roosevelt. That cuts to the real core of AHS: Cult, of which the first three episodes have been made available for review. There will be 11 in all.

Two prominent AHS regulars, Jessica Lange and Kathy Bates, are missing this time out. But Sarah Paulson (top) and Evan Peters (left) have gone the distance, and both are back again as antagonists who seem fated to form an unholy alliance at some point.

Paulson plays Ally Mayfair-Richards, who has an easily disturbed young son named Ozzy via her marriage to Ivy Mayfair-Richards (Alison Pill). On election night, where AHS: Cult begins, the big Trump upset sends Ally cartwheeling back to her old phobias, which namely are constant visions of killer clowns. They had been held at bay during Barack Obama’s presidency when it was “as if the universe righted itself” in Ally’s view. She’s also made to feel guilty about what turned about to be her basically wasted vote for Dr. Jill Stein.

Meanwhile, Kai Anderson (Peters) is celebrating Trump’s victory in solitude. While Ally weeps loudly, he shouts “USA!” in demonic fashion before creepily painting his face. Then come the opening credits, which include plastic masks of Trump and Hillary Clinton in addition to a lot of blood.

After being rebuked by the City Council -- Kai wants to leave all churches unprotected -- he warns there’s “nothing more dangerous in the world than a humiliated man.” Let the fear-mongering begin, with Hispanics serving as Kai’s first easy target before he runs for a suddenly vacant City Council seat.

Principal AHS maestro Ryan Murphy has shown restraint when depicting real-life events in two recent and exemplary FX miniseries, American Crime Story: The People v. O. J. Simpson and Feud: Bette and Joan. But as he’s repeatedly demonstrated, Murphy’s excesses can spill over in his mostly fictional projects, whether it’s Nip/Tuck, Scream Queens or the likes of AHS: Hotel, which was horrific in the worst sense of that word.

In AHS: Cult, Paulson’s Ally is constantly traumatized -- to the point where her frights become almost comedic. A borderline creepy shrink, Dr. Rudy Vincent (Cheyenne Jackson), keeps trying to calm her while spouse Ivy repeatedly wonders how much more she can take. In the midst of all this, they hire a spooky new babysitter named Winter Anderson (Billie Lourd, right), with whom Ally and Ivy almost immediately find fault. But whatever Winter’s transgressions -- which mostly involve putting little Ozzy in danger -- they keep bringing her back. Which is more than a little ridiculous.

During a recent AHS: Cult press conference held by FX, Murphy said he’s trying to “make a point, but not take it too seriously. And I think that’s evident in the first episode where Sarah Paulson chases clowns with (a bottle of) rosé (wine).”

But the overall stakes during these first three episodes are otherwise deadly serious, with Peters’ Kai tightening the tension, panic, and paranoia with a demonic master plan. By Episode 3, an ironically named TV newswoman ends her live report with, “Coming to you from a neighborhood gripped in fear, this is Beverly Hope reporting.”

It’s all reminiscent of The Twilight Zone at its best, save for the tonal missteps that keep kicking in after Ally’s latest freak-out. “I think there might be something wrong with me,” she deduces in Episode 2 after a seemingly never-ending series of mental breakdowns. Ya think?

AHS: Cult also will include upcoming appearances by previous participants Frances Conroy, Mare Winningham, and Chaz Bono. There’s also first-timer Lena Dunham, whose name is dropped by babysitter Winter in the Sept. 5th premiere. Dunham otherwise won’t be factored in until a flash-backing Episode 7, in which she plays real-life radical feminist Valerie Solanas. Her “The SCUM Manifesto” called for eliminating the male sex and spurred Solanas’ failed 1968 assassination attempt on Andy Warhol.

This seventh edition of the series also marks the return of Twisty the Clown, a key and very sadistic component of AHS: Freak Show. And Billy Eichner (left, from Billy on the Street) makes his first AHS appearance as off-center Harrison Wilton, one of the Richards’ new next-door neighbors.

Through it all, Peters again excels -- performance-wise, at least -- as a Trump acolyte whose fires burn white hot from election night on. His full investments in deranged characters remain a wonder to behold.

But as Kai’s manipulations thicken, so do AHS: Cult’s overall misfires and excesses. There’s no killer bulldozer yet, but that seems to be the basic thematic approach. Trump is a tough nut to tackle -- and you can take that literally if you’d like. Even so, this is a big, bloody hunk of red meat for his remaining defenders, many of whom already see Hollywood in the worst ways imaginable. In that respect, AHS: Sledgehammer might be a more fitting title. You want subtlety? Try Texas Chainsaw Massacre.
 
 
 
 
 
Leave a Comment: (No HTML, 1000 chars max)
 
 Name (required)
 
 Email (required) (will not be published)
 
EVAXN
Type in the verification word shown on the image.
 
 
 Page: 1 of 1  | Go to page: 
2 Comments
 
 
Sean Dougherty
The only way to make this engaging would be to have the character's doom be brought on by their paranoia about Trump. You're basically getting nightmares over a president whose administration is so toothless he's lucky to get his lunch order right.
Sep 5, 2017   |  Reply
 
 
R. Dunn
I am a Conservative (I know you stuck up, elitist liberals "entertainment writers' like you have NO IDEA what that means) and Trump supporter...I am so disgusted with all this blind Trump hate. Can't you people just get over it and move on.
Myself, and millions of Proud Conservatives and Patriots had to deal with that awful, race-baiting, anti-American, neo-Socialist Barack Hussein Obama for 8 god-damn years...Where was the MEDIA questioning everything Obama (and his wookie looking wife) did??? Where was HOLLYWOOD mocking his awkward, secretive, always scripted 'presidency'???
You people really need to get real lives...
Sep 5, 2017   |  Reply
 
Elizabeth L'Abate
I'm just now reading this comment, in Jan. 2019, and the only excuse I can think of for it still being here is that the moderators didn't read it. I'm far from a fan of Obama's co-opting the momentum of the single-payer movement, nor his laissez -faire attitudes to mass incarceration, mass deportation, mass surveillance, ever-more-massive income inequality, torture without prosecution of folks in the previous administration, shutdown of the Occupy! movement, etc. But to let remain the very racist comment about Michelle Obama above, as bad as and similar to the racist comment about an African American woman that Rosanne Barr made, that got her fired from her own popular show, make me wonder what show so distracted you from noticing it?
Jan 6, 2019
 
 
EG
Dear R. Dunn -- TVWW has been quite tolerant of all points of view about entertainment subjects. We are quite happy to have even the most ardent critiques on reviews remain on the site for all to see... even from readers who lobby for the adult genre, BTW. What we can't tolerate, though, are canned trolling points, no matter the political orientation. Nothing in the above column can be characterized as blind hate for the commander in chief. In fact, if you've read the article, which I am quite sure you haven't, you will read a note that says the series might be biased against him. TVWW is a pleasant place for all to gather around noteworthy TV territory. Obvious political and personal hate speech will be deleted in the future. We are leaving this up, for REAL mockery purposes, of course. --EG
Sep 5, 2017
 
 
 
 
 Page: 1 of 1  | Go to page: