“I hate spunk!”
Three words in the pilot and I was hooked on The Mary Tyler Moore Show for seven
seasons. (The last two of which I was
fortunate to write episodes for, one
of them, good.)
Before that, during The
Dick Van Dyke Show pilot, Laura Petrie worries about her son Richie’s
“giveaway” health symptom making her reluctant to go out, the giveaway health symptom
being,
“He won’t eat his cupcake.”
I immediately signed up for five years.
It doesn’t take much.
A signaling indicator, saying,
“This is for me.”
Which returns me to Shtisel.
I watched all the available 24 episodes. I do not want to watch them again – because
some of them, ringing sensitive “Memory Bells”, can be pretty tough going. But, y’know… for years after visiting the Buffalo Bill Historical Museum in Cody,
Wyoming, I used to call up the “Gift Shop” and order "Wild West" wall calendars, just so I
could hear the place was still there.
I feel the same about Shtisel. I have an urge to look at its Netflix promotional photos, to recall it
gloriously exists, beaming thatI once joyfully watched it.
Forget the attraction stemming from its portraying an intensely
regulated substratum of “My People.”
Let’s talk about the writing.
Not all the
writing. Not the language. (Which came in snippets of cryptic translation.) Not the rich and truthful characterization. Not the thematic intention of a drama derived
from the understanding that pious people are not exempt from personal
difficulties – some of which emanate from being pious people – and that, in the
end, we all do the best that we can. You
don’t have to be Jewish to think, “Minus the ear locks, that’s us.”
Forget the chuckling aphorisms – which I’m not sure are actual
aphorisms – like the one about Orthodox Jews and ritually “unclean” house pets.
“If a Jew has a dog, he’s not a Jew, or it’s not a dog.”
You not going to hear that
on Big Brother.
I focus alone on Shticel’s
unique samples of specialness, the “I hate spunk!” moments, triggering viewer
loyalty, awe, and cap-tipping admiration.
It’s the stuff that doesn’t need to be in there. In fact, it has no business being in there – as in, “How did they ever come up with that?” – but it is.
And best for me, I never in a million years saw it coming.
Sixty-three year-old Rabbi Shtisel, stands on a chair,
changing an overhead light bulb. The
chair suddenly topples, sending “Reb” Shtisel tumbling awkwardly to the floor.
He lies there unable to move, writhing in clear physical
distress. After an extended stay in this
precarious “I’ve fallen and I can’t get up” predicament, “Reb” Shtisel reaches
into his pocket, takes out a package of cigarettes, lights up, and, lying
immobilized on his back, begins contentedly to smoke.
The step after the
dramatic step? (Which turned out only to
be the “set-up.”)
I found it delicious.
A smaller though no less wonderful interlude:
The younger
Shtisel, a promising artist, confronts his secular gallery owner/boss,
concerning a serious conflict, but not before the gallery owner insists that,
while discussing this troubling concern, they both enjoy popsicles.
On a non-verbal level of bountiful delights, there is a
daughter on the show who looks exactly like her onscreen mother. Nobody ever does that. You take the best actors who walk in the door. Here, they held firm on compatible noses.
A show committed to assiduous detail and surprise makes me
jealous, but more importantly,
a fan.
By the way, before exiting the subject,
While returning to Shtisel
to catch the following episode, this
happened.
One day, after watching “Episode 9”, I turn off my TV. I return the next day for “Episode 10”, I
click on Netflix, and find, brightly bordered and ready to go
... is “Episode 12.”
How did that happen?
It’s like, in the interim, my television watched two
episodes of Shtisel without me. The TV’s was on “Episode 12”, and I’m back on “Episode 10.”
Is it possible a person’s electronic device, contracting the
passionate “bug” of its owner, can watch two episodes of Shtisel entirely on its own?
Can TV’s watch TV?
They do other new
stuff. Why not that?
There is the chance that, after watching them alone, my TV
decides I would not like episodes “10” and “11” and jumps me protectively to
“12.”
Or is it something separate
from technology?
There is definitely mysticism in Shtisel.
1 comment:
Could someone else have watched them while you were out? Perhaps on a mobile device? On one of the other TVs in the house? Or, Heaven forbid, someone might have your account number and is watching on your dime. Good luck with this mystery.
You've sold me. I'm going to look it up and watch.
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