Louis C.K. and Hadley Delaney in FX's Louie. |
Ever wondered what it would look like if you mixed television comedy with indie filmmaking budget and sensibilities? Now that Louis C.K.’s darkly funny series Louie has returned for a second season, you can wonder no more. Loosely based on his real life (as a 40-something, recently divorced comedian with joint custody of his two young daughters), Louis C.K. has been given unprecedented control over the content and direction of the series. With a promise to FX to keep the budget to shoestring levels, the network has agreed to stay out of his way, leaving C.K. to star, write, direct, edit, produce, and even cast every episode. Gleefully mixing gross-out comedy with existential anxiety, a single episode can casually touch on themes of post-divorce loneliness, the joys and traumas of parenthood, the aging male body, and even mortality itself. Last week’s episode (the second season premiere) may have hinged on an epic bout of flatulence, but it was also one of the most poignantly painful stories Louie has ever told. I’m not sure if Louie is the saddest comedy in the history of television or its funniest tragedy. Either way, it is one of the most original shows on TV today.
Louis C.K. behinds the scenes on the set of Louie |
Most of the episodes of the first season were comprised of loosely connected segments, essentially scripted short films of varying lengths knit together with scenes of Louie’s stand-up act. This internally episodic structure means that C.K. can tell the stories he wants to tell without concern for length. If he’s got a seven minute story, he takes seven minutes; if he’s got a twenty-two minute story to tell, he’ll use the whole episode. And whether it’s Louie being bluntly honest to a disruptive audience member or falling into a nitrous oxide-induced dream state and telling off Osama bin Laden (“I guess what I’m saying is, and maybe I’m oversimplifying things, but I think that 9/11 was a bullshit move. I don’t mean to offend you, but I think you’re an asshole.”) the series overflows with brilliant, stand alone sequences. At the beginning of the season, there were often several of these sequences in a single episode. As the season progressed, however, the show got progressively more introspective, and more single story episodes began to appear. If last week’s episode is any indication, C.K.’s narrative ambitions have been ramped up even more in this new season.
One sequence in particular, a brief conversation across a poker table that opens the series’ second episode, deserves special mention since it demonstrates the intricacy of writing and direction that makes the show great. Like a one-act play, it moves effortlessly from unbridled vulgarity to a solemn and profoundly effective conclusion. The scene almost defies description, so I’ve included a link to the clip here. (Warning: the scene contains offensive and extremely sexual language.)
'Louie' on stage |
The way the episodes intersperse examples of Louie’s stand-up routines with its narrative sequences may superficially remind us of the early seasons of Seinfeld, but that is the extent of the similarity between the two shows. As pointedly funny as Louie's stand-up segments are are, they are anything but disposable. They are the rare instances when the character seems even remotely comfortable in his own skin. And over the course of the first season, it becomes clearer and clearer how much of himself (the on-screen) Louie puts into his act, and how much he needs those 5-minute sets to stay grounded and sane.
Louie is often hilarious and frequently scatological, but it is also intense and intimate without ever feeling self-indulgent, brutally honest and sincere in ways that even the best dramas rarely dare. The show bluntly flouts most of the most basic rules of narrative and on-screen continuity: actress Amy Landecker, who plays Louie’s ill-fated date in one episode, shows up as the younger version of his mother just two episodes later, and the brother introduced last season has been unceremoniously replaced by a sister in this new season. But none of this matters. Louie is telling a different kind of story, a single, heart-breaking vision spread across 13-episode seasons.
Louie’s first season was released last week on DVD, and the second episode of its sophomore season airs tonight on FX. Go and watch it.
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