Article first published as FLAKED Review on Seat42F.
WARNING: Spoilers ahead.
It seems like Netflix
has a new series practically every Friday these days! This week’s entry
is FLAKED, an indie-style dramedy about an alcoholic living in Venice
and the bad decisions he makes. I would say it has a similar tone and
feel to Love, which Netflix released a few weeks ago, but is a heck of a lot more depressing, without the possibility for a happy ending anytime soon.
FLAKED
stars Will Arnett (Arrested Development, BoJack Horseman, The Lego
Movie) as Chip, the protagonist. The role is perfect for Arnett, who
deserves a starring vehicle. Chip is self-centered without being
egotistical, and tries to be a good friend, even though he doesn’t quite
know how to be one. Or if he does know how, he doesn’t understand how
to make himself follow through on it. He’s deeply in pain but doesn’t
show it much. It’s a complex role with layers in every scene and themes
of addiction suffusing it. Arnett communicates a lot more than the
dialogue alone would indicate every time he’s on screen, which is pretty
much the entire running time.
Arnett
is joined by David Sullivan (Argo) as Dennis and George Basil
(CollegeHumor) as Cooler, Chip’s best buddies. Both actors are good
enough that they don’t pale by comparison to Arnett, but neither steal
his spotlight, either, a rare fete that shows real talent. Both
characters are screwed up in their own ways, and seem to be Chip’s
friends by default, existing in his world, convenient to his
geographical location.
Cooler and
Dennis like Chip, but I can’t tell if he likes them. He certainly wants
them to like him, but is that because he genuinely enjoys having the two
around, or because he has no one else? Certainly this isn’t the type of
friendship a person seeks out, but everyone needs someone in their
lives to provide them some emotional stability, and unless Chip does
something really horrible (which is often a possibility), he has them.
There’s
also a girl in FLAKED, because there’s always a girl. Actually, there
are two. Kara (Lina Esco, Kingdom) is Chip’s current special someone,
and she is as messed up as he is. I think there is real affection
between the two of them, but they are both too damaged to make it work
correctly, she perhaps more so than he.
Enter
London (Ruth Kearney, The Following), whom Dennis is interested in. But
she may be more interested in Chip, who might not give her a second
look if Kara were being warmer, but she isn’t. So Chip is trapped in a
bad situation, having chemistry with the woman he isn’t sleeping with
and whom one of his closest buddies is interested in. There is no way
this is going to end well for all three of them, and quite possibly, not
for any of them.
It’s this type of
situation that FLAKED excels at, and that Arnett does so well. One in
which everything is crappy, but the viewer is still compelled to watch
and root for success in. Chip desperately needs something to go well in
his life, but there is no clear way to get that outcome from the current
circumstances.
From what I can tell,
it looks like London is a main character and Kara is not. Dennis is
also a main character. So the drama to me is whether Chip will find a
way to help Dennis be with London, sacrificing his own possible romantic
happiness, or if his friendship will fall apart. Neither one will
likely contribute to his sobriety.
FLAKED’s first season will be available on Netflix starting this Friday.
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