“Nearly
all men can withstand adversity,
but if you want to test a man’s
character, give him power.”
-
Abraham Lincoln
This
aphorism appears at the beginning of the final program in the superb
Danish television blockbuster Borgen, which is the brainchild of Adam
Price who both produced and was a major writer of the consistently
intelligent scripts over three ten-program seasons. (The title refers to the Christiansborg Palace, where the Danish Parliament, Prime Minister's office and Supreme Court reside.) Every episode
begins with an epigraph that ranges from Machiavelli to Churchill; a
casual viewer might not realize how astute it is until he or she watches it
twice, which I highly recommend.
Along with The Killing and
The
Bridge,
Borgen
has
been an overwhelming popular and critical success in the UK, and the trio of shows are beginning to make inroads in North America, primarily through
libraries, independent video stores and specialized American
channels. Since television viewers on this side of the pond seem to
be put off by reading subtitles (although the actors all speak
excellent English when speaking to any foreigner), the two police
procedurals have been remade for North American audiences with at
best mixed, and in my opinion inferior, results. Apparently, HBO is
considering a remake of Borgen,
but I am not certain how American audiences will respond to a series
that deals with coalition politics involving eight political parties,
a process likely alien to many of these viewers.
Currently,
American television political dramas have largely been viewed through
a satirical (Veep)
or melodramatic (House of Cards)
prism, both with a predominately cynical tone. Not since The West
Wing,
to which Borgen
bears
some resemblance even though the latter is more layered, has politics
been regarded as a positive vocation. Even the far right leader of
the xenophobic Nationalist Party is treated with a degree of respect
befitting his position although his politics are regarded as abhorrent
or embarrassing to even the conservative Liberal Party. Unlike the
polemical The Newsroom,
in which the anchor, Will McAvoy (Jeff Daniels), is a mouthpiece for
the views of its creator, Aaron Sorkin, to trash the American
political right, Borgen
offers
a more rounded portrayal of the media from the fair-minded state
television news programs to the sleazy tabloid newspapers in its
reportage and analysis of Danish politics. In contrast to House
of Cards,
Borgen
is less about the climbing of the greasy pole by a smarmy, malevolent
politician who will resort to any
means
to achieve his goal, and more about what happens when an individual
reaches the top, with the pressures of politics, policy and family
continually threatening to send the Prime Minister over the edge.
In
the first program, the principled leader of the small centre-left
Moderate Party, Birgitte Nyborg (Sidse Babbett Knudson is
outstanding), is able to capitalize on the mishaps of the leaders of
the two largest parties with a rousing, hopeful speech that catapults
her into the Prime Minister’s job, as the head of a
slim coalition-powered majority and the first female to hold that job
in Denmark. (Currently, Denmark does have its first woman prime minister.)
The
weight of the series largely falls on Knudson, yet she is surrounded
by exceptionally good actors in supporting roles. Chief among them is
Kasper Juul (Pilou Asback), Birgitte’s tough-minded and fiercely
loyal and skilled spin doctor, her
media advisor and political fixer. Kasper might be the most
interesting character because despite his gifts, he has a dark past
that threatens to undermine his job effectiveness and sabotage his
personal love relationship with Katrine Fonsmark (Birgitte Hjort
Sørensen). She is a principled and ambitious journalist whose
idealism clashes with the pragmatism of her sharp-witted
editor-in-chief for TV1News, Torben Friis (Søren Malling). Katrine
replaces Kasper as Birgitte’s spin doctor in the third season. The
primary professional difference between Kasper and Katrine is that he
will use incriminating personal material against anyone who resorts
to gutter politics while Katrine will resist that tactic even if her
boss is tempted to sacrifice her principle of
defeating opponents on the issues rather than by stooping to a smear
campaign when someone invades the privacy of her children.
Borgen
illustrates
the daily grind of politics because politicians cannot afford the
luxury of hyper-partisan bloviating. They wear a veil of civility
since they must talk to each other when negotiation and compromise
is essential not only in forming and maintaining a government but
also in achieving legislative success. As Birgitte learns that art,
she loses some of her starry-eyed idealism and becomes savvier, more
decisive and even ruthless, although we know she has the best of
intentions and will put the greater good beyond her own needs. At one
point, in order to secure the support of a coalition partner for whom
a key ministry is the price for its endorsement of an important bill,
she must dump her mentor and political confidant, the Finance
Minister. We know how difficult it is for her to dismiss her friend
as she places her emotions behind
a steely veneer when
she is in the public arena, unless she is smiling before the cameras
or disarming an opponent in Parliament. She maintains a
poker face when, for
example, she refuses to acquiesce to the threat by the dictator of a
former Soviet republic who will scuttle a
huge business deal for Denmark unless she turns a
dissident over to him, knowing that he will be tortured and executed. In her
private moments, we see a much different Birgitte. But more about
that later.
Knudsen with Mikael Birkkjaer as her husband |
This issue of health care is a touchstone for the third and more powerful layer within the series: the personal price that one pays for serving in the public arena, especially for a woman. I am reminded of a controversial magazine piece by Anne-Marie Slaughter, a former Princeton academic and foreign policy expert who quit a key position at the State Department, though she was the first woman to hold such a position, because of the effect that her prolonged absences were having on one of her sons. These themes resonate with Borgen.
When
the series begins, Birgitte is happily married to Philip (Mikael
Birkkjaer), who has agreed to put his CEO position on hold and teach
economics to college students so that he can spend more time with
their teenage daughter and young son. He is generous and considerate
of his wife’s responsibilities, but her penchant for talking to him
as though he was one of her ministers rather than her husband and her
request that he relinquish financial assets so as not to give the
appearance of a conflict of interest inflict a serious strain on the
marriage. When for similar reasons she asks him not to accept a CEO
offer, he is so angry that he leaves home, takes up with another
woman and the marriage disintegrates. When he asks for a divorce, she
is devastated. We see the pain in her eyes and the struggle to carry
on with her public responsibilities as season one ends.
In season two the estranged couple must deal with the acute anxiety attacks of their daughter, Laura. When the situation becomes critical, Birgitte and Philip reluctantly check Laura into an expensive clinic since the waiting time for public-funded facilities is too long. This decision occurs at the same time as Birgitte’s governing coalition is attempting to expand public health services. The tabloid press predictably accuses her of hypocrisy. Worse, its dastardly editor dispatches a paparazzi photographer to snap pictures of the troubled girl causing a major setback in her emotional health and prompting Birgitte to undertake a major shift in her life. She has already lost a husband; she will do whatever is necessary to not sacrifice her daughter.
In season two the estranged couple must deal with the acute anxiety attacks of their daughter, Laura. When the situation becomes critical, Birgitte and Philip reluctantly check Laura into an expensive clinic since the waiting time for public-funded facilities is too long. This decision occurs at the same time as Birgitte’s governing coalition is attempting to expand public health services. The tabloid press predictably accuses her of hypocrisy. Worse, its dastardly editor dispatches a paparazzi photographer to snap pictures of the troubled girl causing a major setback in her emotional health and prompting Birgitte to undertake a major shift in her life. She has already lost a husband; she will do whatever is necessary to not sacrifice her daughter.
Season
three begins a few years later. Birgitte’s personal and
professional circumstances have considerably altered but she is eager
to embrace politics again and form a new political party. As she
achieves public success, the price is her personal health as her
doctor discovers the early stages of breast cancer. She undergoes
radiation treatment attempting to keep it secret from her family and
her colleagues with potentially damaging results for her son and an
embarrassing public mishap. Again she must demonstrate flexibility
and personal courage to stabilize her family and recover her
political mojo, and that she does, assisted
in part by the introduction of a new character, an economic advisor
with a chequered past played by the talented Søren Ravn (who is a
powerful presence in the first season of The
Killing and
in one program of
Sherlock’s third
season in which he is eerie and malevolent). Her turn-around efforts
admittedly constitute a feel-good story that flirts with but avoids
sentimentality largely because of the writing and Knudson's extraordinary
performance. How the trilogy concludes may surprise some
viewers, but I think it is plausible and makes sense given both her
high regard for public life – at one point she looks up at the
Danish parliament, and calls it her “second home” without a trace
of irony or cynicism – and sobering experiences. Despite some minor
blemishes that appear in the third season – the relegation of
Kasper to a minor role and the messy sexual liaison within the TV
news department – I found the entire series enthralling and will
regard it as a benchmark for assessing future political dramas.
– Bob Douglas is a teacher and author. His second volume to That Line of Darkness: The Shadow of Dracula and the Great War (Encompass Editions, 2011) is titled That Line of Darkness: Vol. II The Gothic from Lenin to bin Laden. You can find more at his website: http://www.thatlineofdarkness.com.
– Bob Douglas is a teacher and author. His second volume to That Line of Darkness: The Shadow of Dracula and the Great War (Encompass Editions, 2011) is titled That Line of Darkness: Vol. II The Gothic from Lenin to bin Laden. You can find more at his website: http://www.thatlineofdarkness.com.
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