Try
imagining Showtime’s Wall Street cops ‘n’ robbers series Billions as a sci-fi adventure we’ll call Star Trek Voyeurs: The Far Frontiers of Finance.
Hedge
fund maven Bobby Axelrod (Damian Lewis) captains Starship Axe Capital, his
clinically pristine, all-glass mothership crewed by mutant humanoids and
androids of the species Homo pecuniarius
with an BDSM dominatrix (Maggie Siff) as morale officer. Axe’s merry band of
cosmic traders and others in a starfleet federation of hedge funds probe
financial deep space and legal black holes for personal wealth beyond anyone’s
wildest dreams—billions!
Yet
in a not-so-far-off corner of the same universe lurks the righteous and warlike
species Homo foederatus. Led by the
dyspeptic Chuck Rhoades (Paul Giamatti) with a velvet fist in a Teflon glove,
this litigious species is comprised of ever-scheming career mutants and
just-plain-joes in rack suits who populate the Police Plaza asteroid, part of a
Federal Galaxy ruled by a Darth Vader figure called ‘General’.
The
facts, unfortunately, are more prosaic.
Wall Street and the Office of the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) is the American League East of US finance and law professionals. Billions’s principals and several of its less-hinged characters may be how some financiers and government lawyers fancy themselves. But having covered this world and its activities as a reporter, we found Billions characters, plots and story lines to get more far-fetched with each of the first three seasons.
Billions showrunners may have pitched the series as The Sopranos meets Wall Street. But ninety-nine-and-nine-tenths percent of what the characters in Billions do is office work. Even though a lot of designer luggage filled with bundles of $100 bills gets moved around, the nerdy, one-dimensional nature of people self-involved in the mathematics of high finance on the one hand and lawyers’ office politics on the other is a lot less colorful as drama than psychotic middle-aged, blue collar Italian-American males with cute nicknames who meet in a deluxe titty bar to josh each other and divvy kickback money and plot who to extort and whack next.
This
is no reflection on the actors’ fine work in Billions’s cast of stinkers
& nasties, not least of whose task is retailing enough pop culture, movie
and television references to make even Quentin Tarantino’s head spin. John
Malkovich does his Malkovich thing as a Russian kleptarch: the showrunners
missed primo pop-ref opportunities by not naming his character Boris Badenov
and casting Cameron Diaz as Natasha Fatale. The best of the worst may be
Charles ‘Dad’ Rhoades (Jeffrey DeMunn), father of Chuck (Giamatti), the US
Attorney for the SDNY. Dad is a fiendishly foolish and entirely unsympathetic
entitled old bantam rooster, and DeMunn swings this role with real aplomb.
The
challenge at the heart of this show may be making viewers care about characters
whose lives center on their work. The
Sopranos is about family. Its devoted following and longevity comes from its
characters’ relationships with each other. It may be a pleasure and privilege
for the men to be mobsters, but that’s just work: the show draws us in because
it tells stories about these people’s relationships, centering on the marital
relationship between Tony and Carmela Soprano.
Both
the cops and robbers in Billions
feature a potpourri of personalities, similar to the various Star Trek
franchises’ dysfunctional families, which reflect the typical contemporary
American workplace. There are ‘families’, but no one really has a life outside
of work. Rhoades’s wife Wendy (Siff) is the narrative fulcrum because she in
effect ‘marries’ the work environments of her husband’s cops and her employer’s
robbers.
Thus
it is fitting that the most compelling character to emerge is the one most
dedicated and best at their work. Taylor Mason (Asia Kate Dillon) presents as nonbinary,
goes by third person plural pronouns, and lives the math in a world in which
nearly everyone else ‘does’ it. Taylor appears to employ coming off as a sci-fi
android as their magician’s white glove. They are smart, but young; and they have
an ethical and emotional core that may end up being their Achilles heel—a
mythical story to which Taylor refers in season three: ‘His mother had to hold
him somewhere to dip him,’ they said.
Bobby
Axelrod (Damian Lewis) captains ‘robber’ Starship Axe Capital in Billions.
|
Chuck Rhoades (Paul Giamatti) leading the ‘cops’ SDNY in Billions. |
Clancy
Brown as ‘The General’ in Billions.
|
Wall Street and the Office of the US Attorney for the Southern District of New York (SDNY) is the American League East of US finance and law professionals. Billions’s principals and several of its less-hinged characters may be how some financiers and government lawyers fancy themselves. But having covered this world and its activities as a reporter, we found Billions characters, plots and story lines to get more far-fetched with each of the first three seasons.
Billions showrunners may have pitched the series as The Sopranos meets Wall Street. But ninety-nine-and-nine-tenths percent of what the characters in Billions do is office work. Even though a lot of designer luggage filled with bundles of $100 bills gets moved around, the nerdy, one-dimensional nature of people self-involved in the mathematics of high finance on the one hand and lawyers’ office politics on the other is a lot less colorful as drama than psychotic middle-aged, blue collar Italian-American males with cute nicknames who meet in a deluxe titty bar to josh each other and divvy kickback money and plot who to extort and whack next.
John
Malkovich as Russian kleptarch Grigor Andolov in Billions.
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Paul
Giamatti and Jeffrey DeMunn as Chuck and Charles Rhoades in Billions.
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Maggie
Siff’s Wendy Rhoades makes for the narrative fulcrum in Billions.
|
Asia
Kate Dillon as wunderkind Taylor Mason in Billions.
|
Aboard
the Starship Axe Capital in Showtime’s Billions.
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