June 2, 2012
After
Lund, there was the self-medicating bipolar CIA agent Carrie Mathison in
Homeland, picking up men in bars for functional sex, a trait shared with
Swedish policewoman Saga Noren in The Bridge, a seemingly undiagnosed
case of Asperger's syndrome.
It's a trend that is taken to its logical conclusion in Sky Atlantic's first
homegrown drama, Hit & Miss (written by Shameless creator Paul Abbott),
in which Chloë Sevigny's Mia is both a sociopath and the owner (albeit
reluctantly) of a penis.
Mia is a transsexual saving up for her gender-changing operation by working as a
contract killer, her clinically ruthless day job suddenly messed up by the
discovery that she has fathered a 10-year-old boy.
Hit & Miss is an unusual concoction - La Femme Nikita meets Shameless,
you could say - which perhaps reflects the inspired/random way in which it was
created. "I had two concepts that I had been working on and that I fitted
together," says Abbott, "the domestic story of a transsexual and a separate
drama about a hit man. Singly they didn't add up to a five-course meal, but put
together..."
One of the chief delights of Hit & Miss is watching Mia deal with big,
bullying men who think she is easy prey. It's a fantasy of female empowerment,
although one, as with all of these anti-social heroines, created by men.
And in the case of Saga in The Bridge, like God forming Eve out of Adam's
rib, woman was created to complement her male colleague, Martin.
"We started out with Martin," says Hans Rosenfeldt, creator of The Bridge.
"We wanted to get away from a Swedish cliché of what middle-aged male police
officers are like... We put more female characteristics on him."
It was Saga, Martin's Swedish partner, who was given what might be called
the male traits - although you don't have to be a feminist to ask why, for a
woman to be single-minded and very good at her job, she has to be in some way
autistic.
"We
didn't diagnose Saga," says Rosenfeldt. "But then when we aired the show it
turned out that we'd created an Asperger's personality. There are a lot
dysfunctional female police officers right now. I guess it's something in the
air."
These driven, complicated women are forever being told to go home/take a
holiday/get off the case - and they equally invariably ignore this advice.
Sofia Helin is brilliant in The Bridge, while Claire Danes justly won a
Golden Globe for Homeland and Chloë Sevigny brings her characteristic
fearlessness to Hit & Miss.
They are part of a wider evolution of female characters that really got going
with Edie Falco's pill-popping anti-heroine in Nurse Jackie and
Mary-Louise Parker's pot-dealing Nancy in Weeds.
Abbott thinks that the boom in dark, complex heroines stems from writers being
inspired by watching other writers expand the horizons for their leading female
characters.
"Every time you see one work as special as The Killing, it inspires other
writers to be more confident with outspoken female roles," he says. Expect more
of the same, in other words, and hooray for that.
--
Makow: My reaction to stories like this: God and Satan wagered on mankind. Who would
humanity love more? Satan is winning and and will give humanity its due.