The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.
The following story contains spoilers from Huluâs âThe Great.â
Huluâs âThe Greatâ spends a lot of time imagining how 18th century Russian royalty might have spent their time. Men who donât have to fight in wars wrestle endlessly in the palace, which is really a fancy frat house. Women forgo literacy and philanthropy for gossip and rolling balls across a lawn. And Peter III â the countryâs reigning degenerate, portrayed by Nicholas Hoult â tests guns in crowded rooms, sleeps with all his friendsâ wives and tells jokes he forces everyone to laugh at, whether theyâre funny or not. (Spoiler: Theyâre not.)
All the casual violence, sex and animal abuse is a rude awakening to Catherine II (Elle Fanning), Peterâs starry-eyed wife, who soon seeks to dethrone him in a military-backed coup. âSheâs walking into a world that has to be like, âWhat the ... is this place?!â and I want the audience to feel the same,â said series creator Tony McNamara. âThereâs often an expectedness to period genre things, so we always tried our best to not choose the most expected route.â
Though âThe Greatâ has not yet been picked up for a second season, McNamara â who also wrote the irreverent 2018 movie âThe Favouriteâ â initially pitched it as an âoccasionally trueâ series tracking Catherineâs lifelong reign and spanning five or six seasons. âUnfortunately, my mind is full of shocking moments, so I donât think Iâll run out of ideas,â he said with a laugh. He walked The Times through the debut seasonâs most depraved recreational activities.
In Huluâs âThe Great,â star Elle Fanning and creator Tony McNamara give Catherine âThe Favouriteâ treatment.
Drinking in âThe Greatâ seems to require three steps: shouting âHuzzah!,â downing a shot of alcohol and throwing the glass on the floor so that it smashes into a million pieces. The ritual dates back to Peter the Great, Peter IIIâs grandfather, and is usually reserved for special toasts. âIt seemed very appropriate to the character of Peter [III] that he would be so dangerous and cavalier as to do it after practically every sip,â McNamara said, laughing.
Throughout the season, the show smashed thousands of breakaway shot glasses and wine glasses made of sugar â a well-known trick to get the same effect without risk of injury. The crew stocked up after nearly running out while shooting the pilot. âWe were rushing out to try and find new ones, and see if we could use real ones if we threw them against the wall far enough from where anyone was standing,â McNamara recalled. âIn the end, [cinematographer] Matt Chapman shot around it a bit so that principal actors had them and everyone only got one go at the big one.â
Sick of hunting animals and punching each other? Gather âround for the dayâs entertainment: a fatal round of Fight Club between a dog and a raccoon. Theyâre both thrown into a large log, which rollicks back and forth amid unsettling growls. The dog, covered in blood, emerges victorious.
Historically, dogs have been forced into badger-baiting â a practice that, though largely outlawed for centuries, still occurs illegally. But since badgers are a protected species, âwe sort of cast around them and thought, âWell, raccoons are trainable and weâre allowed to shoot with them, thatâs close enough,ââ McNamara said. Real animals were used outside the log, but no one was harmed in the making of the series, as the âfightâ is all visual and sound effects.
What better way to honor wounded veterans than by throwing an ostentatious bash with dinner, dancing and gazing upon the severed heads of the enemy, presented on silver platters? âI feel we are being stared at,â jokes Peter before gouging out the eyeballs with his bare fingers and instructing all party guests to do the same.
âThat whole thing is just something I thought was pretty shocking, in a funny sort of way,â said McNamara, with assurances that that moment has no historical antecedent. âAt the read-through, it was funny to hear all the âWhat the âŚ?â in the room.â
Since each guest gets his own Swede, the scene needed a lot of heads, and good ones can cost $50,000 each. âThe hardest thing was finding enough heads that, in close-up, look real,â said McNamara, who saluted hair and makeup chief Louise Coles for accentuating the illusion.
When Catherine tries her darndest to get Peter excited about science, the thing that piques his interest is, of course, parachutes, because Peter is an overgrown child. He interrupts a launch demonstration at the last minute by replacing glass bottles with Marialâs (Phoebe Fox) small dog. The experiment may not work with an animal, Peter is told. âWell, failure will also be entertaining,â he says, before throwing the pup into the air. (The chute opens, phew!)
Thankfully, no dog was tossed from the palace exterior in Naples, Italy. âItâs actually a fluffy toy dog that moves,â McNamara said. âWe were gonna do it with a green box so that CGI could build it, but we thought, we have the crowd here, letâs just try it with the toy. It worked so well that we just animated its legs a tiny bit afterward.â
Apparently, a science fair â the elementary school event showcasing makeshift magnets and volcanoes of baking soda and vinegar â is very different from a science party, which Peter throws to surprise Catherine. Look how progressive your husband has become! Hereâs a chance to hold a human heart (with or without a gunshot wound), electrocute a young child and light your farts on fire!
âHeâs adopted her idea, but in his own, 16-year-old boy kind of way,â said McNamara, attributing the idea to the episodeâs co-writer, Gretel Vella. The preposterous party is a fitting contrast to Catherineâs plight to prove the importance of smallpox vaccines by giving one to herself. (And FYI, all fiery flatulences are merely visual effects.)
Peter knows someone is trying to kill him, so he sets up a kind of high-intensity interval torture session to squeeze out confessions from his court. Just like a workout at Barryâs Bootcamp, the space is equipped with different stations: fingernail removal, electrocution, bucket swirlies, hot nipple pinches, good old-fashioned punches and eels that will suck on your face until youâre bruised and bleeding. Even better, thereâs space set aside for spectators!
The scene holds no historical truth â McNamara brainstormed common torture tactics alongside his own novel ideas â but required production designer Francesca Di Mottola to rebuild a notable portion of the set in London. âIt was a huge amount of work for a two-page scene,â McNamara said. âBut, I must say, it was quite fun.â
The complete guide to home viewing
Get Screen Gab for everything about the TV shows and streaming movies everyoneâs talking about.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.