How Netflix reality competition âThe Challengeâ compares to original âSquid Gameâ
Welcome to Screen Gab, the newsletter for everyone curious whether Netflix can capture the zeitgeist with âSquid Gameâ again.
Thatâs because the streamerâs reality competition spinoff âSquid Game: The Challengeâ premieres Wednesday. Staff writer Michael OrdoĂąa offers a spoiler-free comparison with the original in this weekâs Break Down.
Plus, Screen Gab No. 108 features a distinctly food-forward survey of the current TV landscape as we head into the United Statesâ most food-centric holiday, with items on âChefs,â âJuliaâ and âLessons in Chemistry.â
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âJuliaâ (Max)
Thanksgivingâs approach always sends me in the direction of food in all its forms, perhaps most especially when Iâm not playing host: With the pressure off, I relish thumbing through my cookbook collection, firing up old episodes of âThe Barefoot Contessa,â tempting myself with my favorite restaurantsâ holiday menus. Itâs in this spirit that I recommend the return of âJulia,â Maxâs otherwise much-diminished dramedy about Julia Child (Sarah Lancashire, undiminished in the slightest) in the age of âThe French Chef.â Where Season 1 ably populated the world of public television that birthed the groundbreaking program, Season 2 â focused on Childâs fear of success, now that sheâs achieved it â nearly loses sight of the fact that there was ever a cooking show at all, dashing hither and yon to keep up with the lonely widows, jealous collaborators, ambitious producers and put-upon editors in the celebrity chefâs orbit. What remains, though, is still delectable to those of us forever eager to sate a craving instead of holding it off. There are beautiful, flirtatious, multilingual men; breathtaking locales; scintillating sex; and, of course, sumptuous meals. It wouldnât be the first time I forgave a seriesâ flaws to bask in the good life it depicts. Especially at this time of year, the pleasure principle holds true, even when itâs stretched as thin as the pastry around a loup en croĂťte. â Matt Brennan
âChefsâ (MHz Choice)
Paris, a restaurant, la langue française â need I say more? âChefs,â from 2015, is a naturalistic melodrama about a chef, called only Le Chef (Clovis Cornillac), the brilliance of whose cuisine is not reflected in the daily receipts, which leads him to make some dangerous decisions. The series, which has more on its plate than your average high-end cafe entree, is rich with Dickensian coincidence â or what seems like coincidence â and juicy yet delicately played plotlines. There is a romance, between Romain (Hugo Becker), a thief who winds up working at the restaurant as a condition of his parole, and Charlène (Joyce Bibring), a single mother popping pills to keep going; there is a villainous rival (Nicolas Gob as Yann). There are new partners all up in the chefâs business. The dishes are crafted by David Toutain, of the Michelin-starred Paris restaurant David Toutain, and they do look good. â Robert Lloyd
Guest spot
A weekly chat with actors, writers, directors and more about what theyâre working on â and what theyâre watching
Sticking to our unofficial food theme isnât any trouble for this weekâs guest, chef, cookbook author and âLessons in Chemistryâ consultant Courtney McBroom. In the Apple TV+ series, adapted from the novel by Bonnie Garmus, Brie Larson plays Elizabeth Zott, a brilliant scientist who is thwarted by the sexism of 1950s America â and turns instead to a cooking show, âSupper at 6.â But itâs not just Larson and co-stars Lewis Pullman and Aja Naomi King who steal the spotlight. Itâs also the seriesâ delicious dishes and faithful re-creation of the midcentury cooking show. McBroom stopped by Screen Gab recently to talk about the seasonâs biggest culinary triumphs, her favorite classic cooking programs and more. âMatt Brennan
What have you watched recently that you are recommending to everyone you know?
This is a little silly, but I want to answer this question honestly. A couple months ago I discovered âBeyond Belief: Fact or Fiction?â [Peacock, Prime Video, more]. Not sure how I missed it when it first came out, but boy am I glad itâs in my life now. Itâs an anthology series from the 1990s hosted by Jonathan Frakes (of âStar Trekâ fame). It is absolutely ridiculous and cheesy and weird and the choices they made with the reenactments are hilarious, but itâs also a little spooky. Itâs right up my alley and I havenât shut up about it since I discovered it. Iâm also stoked for the new season of âFor All Mankindâ [Apple TV+]. I love that show.
What is your go-to âcomfort watch,â the movie or TV show you go back to again and again?
Iâm a native Texan through and through, so I find myself turning to âKing of the Hillâ [Hulu] often. Itâs like going home for 22 minutes. People ask me what it was like growing up in a small town in Texas and I always tell them to watch âKing of the Hillâ â itâs exactly like that. Thereâs an episode (Season 3, Episode 19) where they totally razz my hometown of Wichita Falls the whole time. Itâs so funny. Needless to say, Iâm stoked for the reboot! I also love âTerminator 2: Judgment Dayâ [Paramount+, Fubo TV] with all of my heart. Iâve seen it countless times. Best movie ever made, as far as Iâm concerned. And, with the holidays coming up, I would be remiss not to mention the greatest Christmas film ever made, which is âDie Hardâ [Hulu, Tubi, MGM+].
Whatâs the most memorable dish reproduced in âLessons in Chemistry,â from your point of view as a food consultant? What made it distinctive?
My favorite food from âLessons in Chemistryâ is the montage in Episode 5 when Elizabeth really gets going at âSupper at 6.â Thereâs a gorgeous crown roast of lamb in that segment that Iâm really proud of. We just released that recipe via Food & Wine, if you want to make it! Thereâs also a bananas foster flambĂŠ in that segment, which was so stressful to shoot, because working with live fire on set can be tense. Of course Brie nailed it in one take because sheâs the greatest. Everyone on set cheered when [director] Millicent [Shelton] yelled cut. I was so proud! You can get that recipe too, via lessonsinchemstryrecipes.com. Iâm also posting all of them on my Instagram page.
For many of us, myself included, watching food TV is a particular pleasure â Ina Garten FTW! As a professional, what food TV show past or present do you enjoy watching and why?
To be completely honest, I donât often watch modern cooking shows these days. Itâs like they hit too close to home. They give me anxiety! But I love all the old-school cooking shows from the 1970s and 1980s â [BBC presenter] Keith Floyd, where he just gets blasted on booze the whole time. Martin Yanâs knife skills on âYan Can Cookâ [KQED] are legendary! Graham Kerrâs âThe Galloping Gourmetâ [Fubo TV], Fanny Cradock, Julia Child [PBS]. They donât make them like they used to!
Break down
Times staffers chew on the pop culture of the moment â love it, hate it or somewhere in between
âSquid Game: The Challenge,â premiering Wednesday on Netflix, is the reality competition show based on the smash thriller series from South Korea, but it differs in key ways that distance it considerably from the original. And not just because contestants donât actually die. At times, itâs a study in humanity that might make you want to change your major. Here are five ways the new show is close to the original ⌠and not so close. âMichael OrdoĂąa
Casting. Like the original, âThe Challengeâ tries to represent people from all walks of life. The contestant pool isnât packed with models, geniuses and athletes; it feels like regular folks. You canât be sure whoâs good at anything, which is a plus. The flip side is some arenât exactly big personalities, so the wizards behind the production curtain work overtime to conjure character narratives.
The look. The production design is right on; at times, you do feel youâre watching another batch of contestants going through the dramaâs gauntlet thanks to the familiar visual cues.
The games. The Korean kidsâ games from the original anchor viewers: You know whatâs coming when that giant doll turns its head during âRed Light, Green Light.â (That also leads to a certain amount of predictability.) In relatively rare cases, âThe Challengeâ departs from the originalâs games, but it misses an opportunity to get playful about American schoolyard favorites. Iâm through the seasonâs first half, and Iâm still waiting for something like a scary twist on hopscotch with elevated squares, where a miss leads competitors to fall to their âdeaths.â
Competition reveals character. One way in which âThe Challengeâ closely follows the original is the stress-fueled, freak-out moments that drive the paranoia factor through the roof. When players make the mistake of showing courage, playing fair or trying to help others, they can get punished by the amygdala-dominant group mind. People change on a dime with the tiniest bit of power. Thereâs lying and bullying. And though itâs ugly and off-putting, itâs also true to the originalâs âkill or be killedâ mentality. Plus, it allows villains to emerge.
Randomness. This is where the competition series departs most from the scripted drama. In the original, contestants always had chances to avoid elimination. Here, luck and other factors beyond the contestantsâ control can lead to their departure. The result is an atmosphere of existential terror â not as acute as in fiction, perhaps, given that participants know theyâre not going to be shot â but with lower competitive stakes.
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