When the best edge-of-your-seat rollercoaster ride on television today is the ongoing adventures of President Donald Trump, how can TV dramas hope to compete?
“They can’t,” answers Jason Bateman. “There’s nothing more compelling on TV right now than the incredible work news media is doing in uncovering this fiasco. It just keeps writing itself. You keep thinking that you’ve got a crescendo in the plotline then something even bigger and chewier happens.”
You keep thinking there’s a crescendo in the Trump plotline, then something even bigger happens
Nevertheless, the latest binge-worthy (fictional) series is Ozark, starring Bateman – who also directed several episodes – as Marty Byrde, a shady Chicago financier forced by a drug cartel to relocate to the Lake of the Ozarks and launder millions of dollars to save himself and his family.
Bateman, best known as the most well-balanced member of the Bluth clan in Arrested Development, follows the likes of Breaking Bad’s Bryan Cranston in going from comedy roles to darker, more morally murky territory.
Ozark has as many twists and turns as the lake around which it’s set. This lake, a popular holiday destination in middle America uncharitably nicknamed the ‘Redneck Riviera’, looks like a spidery Chinese dragon. Like fellow TV antiheroes Walter White, Frank Underwood, Tony Soprano and most of the Game of Thrones cast, you find yourself rooting for someone who often behaves quite despicably.
“If you can show there’s humanity and vulnerability behind someone you can get away with a lot,” Bateman says. “Oftentimes it’s a look in the eye, the way you say the line, your behaviour before and after you say the line. We certainly have it on Arrested Development.