Happy Face 29 Posted April 23, 2010 Share Posted April 23, 2010 Started a couple of weeks ago..... David Simon’s new HBO series is called “Treme” and the title alone suggests the difficulty of the subject. Treme doesn’t rhyme with ream; it’s pronounced truh-MAY, and it’s the name of an old New Orleans neighborhood famous for music — and, in some parts, for crime. It’s the kind of area sought out by intrepid travelers eager to bypass the tourist traps on Bourbon Street, the kind of place that guidebooks label “authentic.” It’s a title that serves as a warning: people who say it wrong have no right to be there. “Treme,” which begins on Sunday, takes place three months after Hurricane Katrina, and it is a tribute to the “real” New Orleans by filmmakers who have become connoisseurs of the city, depicting its sound and ravaged looks with rapt reverence and attention to detail. The narrative chronicles the efforts of an eclectic group of locals — among them a trombone player, a chef, a civil rights lawyer, a disc jockey and a displaced Mardi Gras chief — as they struggle to repair their lives after the storm. But mostly, their stories follow the music, the real hero of the tale. The creators, Mr. Simon and Eric Overmyer, are best known for their work on the HBO series “The Wire,” a sprawling five-season drama of crime and corruption in Baltimore, a city that Mr. Simon covered as a newspaper reporter. (David Mills, his long-time associate and one of the show’s key writers, died on the set of “Treme” last month.) In the new show there is anger over government incompetence and neglect, but this is not a Dickensian exploration of failed institutions like “The Wire.” Nor it a call to arms like Spike Lee’s documentary “When the Levees Broke: A Requiem in Four Acts,” which ran on HBO in 2006. “Treme,” which features real musicians, including Elvis Costello, Allen Toussaint and the New Orleans trumpeter Kermit Ruffins as themselves and the violinist Lucia Micarelli as a street musician, is more an act of love, and, odd as it sounds, that makes it harder to embrace. The effort to get New Orleans “right,” to do justice to the city’s charm, its jazz tradition, and now its post-Katrina martyrdom, is at times so palpable it is off-putting, a self-consciousness that teeters on the edge of righteousness. New Orleans is not Venice, but its more chauvinistic natives share the Venetian contempt for tourists. Whether it stems from snobbery or insecurity, some residents nurture a cult of authenticity that villainizes the very outsiders who allow them to remain on the inside. And newcomers who adopt the city as their own sometimes acquire a convert’s zeal. It can sometimes seem as if the creators align themselves with a street musician who in one scene sneeringly plays “When the Saints Come Marching In” for a trio of post-Katrina volunteers from Wisconsin, mocking them for their cornball taste. Fortunately “Treme” has a sense of humor, and most of all a binding love of jazz. The lilting New Orleans-style R&B theme music, “Treme Song” by John Boutté, is a tip-off: the jaunty good spirits that distinguish the New Orleans sound soften the series’s more moralistic moments. This is an elliptically told tale, and it takes a few episodes for the plot and the characters to pick up steam. Some of the stars of “Treme,” notably Wendell Pierce and Clarke Peters, were in “The Wire,” but this is not a Bayou version of that show. Hard-core Simon fans will be disappointed if they expect multiple homicides, drug rings and city hall conspiracies. More than 1,600 people died as a result of Katrina, and three months later in these neighborhoods near the French Quarter there are still missing persons, brawls and bad feeling, as well as members of the National Guard on street patrol. But “Treme” is most of all a story about survival — and the pursuit of pleasure — in the wake of a catastrophe that quickly morphed into, as one character puts it, “federally induced disaster.” High dudgeon is not the same as hypocrisy. One of the charms of the series is that characters who have let the good times roll right over them don’t begrudge others who are just learning to unwind. Davis McAlary (Steve Zahn), an alternative-music D.J., is the city’s most zealous booster and snob: a jazz-loving, pot-smoking bon vivant who torments his bourgeois, gentrifying neighbors and denounces his radio station’s new headquarters in what he describes as “the completely soulless, faux-French market, a shameful shell and shadow of its former self.” Davis turns apoplectic when his station decrees that he play old New Orleans standards during a pledge drive, songs that he denounces, in cruder language, as the New Orleans “canon.” He defiantly puts on “Buona Sera,” a signature song of Louis Prima, a New Orleans native son. It’s not exactly a radical departure from French Quarter fare, but it’s enough for Davis, who happily sings along, surrendering to the swing and sentimentality. He, like almost everyone else in “Treme,” is battling the sense of powerlessness and loss. When Davis hears stray notes outside his window one morning, he bolts out of bed naked. “They’re doing it,” he shouts, “the first second line since the storm.” He is referring to a New Orleans tradition — musicians and dancers who gather behind the first line of a parade — that has given its name to a style of music and even a dance. Rickety houses are still boarded up, rotting roofs sag, but half the neighborhood turns out for the second line, dancing, twirling parasols and sashaying as the Rebirth Brass Band tunes up. That almost doesn’t include Antoine Batiste (Mr. Pierce), a trombone player cadging cab rides to gigs, perpetually hard up and running from woman trouble. Antoine shows up late, but when he catches up and lifts his trombone to join in on “Feel Like Funkin’ It Up,” there is an electrical surge of delight. Half of Treme has left town, including most of the criminals, but the hardier souls return, and that includes Albert Lambreaux (Mr. Peters), a contractor and Mardi Gras Indian Chief who sets out to repair his house plank by plank. Albert is a man of few words, and that is rare. Male characters like Creighton Bernette (John Goodman), a professor and lapsed novelist who rants about federal and municipal incompetence in press interviews, are the voices of outrage. But it is the women who do the harder work of doing something about it. While Creighton fumes, his wife, Toni (Melissa Leo), a civil rights lawyer, struggles late into the night with the local bureaucracy, trying to locate a young man lost in police custody during the storm. Antoine, scrounging for gigs, is too busy or too proud to take the bus to Baton Rouge to visit his sons, but his ex-wife Ladonna (Khandi Alexander), commutes between the two cities to salvage the neighborhood saloon she inherited. “Treme” uses sound and imagery to suggest that even the worst damage and disruption can’t extinguish the joie de vivre, and that is found in the pearly gleam of fresh oysters, the high notes of Antoine’s trombone, the crunch of barbecue, a glistening bottle of French wine, the feathers on a Mardi Gras costume and, most simply, laughter. “Are you saying New Orleans is not a great city, a city that lives in the imagination of the world?” Creighton thunders at a British journalist who speaks dismissively of his city’s decline. The series turns almost didactic at times, but for a reason. “Treme” is a work of imagination that seeks to reacquaint the world with a struggling city’s reality. http://www.nytimes.com/2010/04/09/arts/tel...ml?pagewanted=2 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted April 23, 2010 Author Share Posted April 23, 2010 "The artistic achievement of Treme is that it blends bluntness with the nuances of gorgeous music." "This is a spectacular new series, with some stunning performances--Pierce, Peters, Zahn, in particular--and gorgeous music." "Just like "The Wire," Simon has again delivered a series unlike anything you've seen on television before." "Treme is like Cajun food--it's spicy, it's weird and it's good, but it takes a while to appreciate." "Treme puts everything into every scene. The camerawork is rich and the direction squeezes every nuance from the actors. The city's history has been painstakingly researched and effortlessly inserted into the writing. As a result, the moments—or notes—that make up this show are all that much richer, that much livelier." http://www.metacritic.com/tv/shows/treme Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Barney 0 Posted April 23, 2010 Share Posted April 23, 2010 I'll be all over this. Never got around to watching the Wire, so I'll give this my full attention. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted April 23, 2010 Author Share Posted April 23, 2010 Never got around to watching the Wire I'm jealous. http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B...indhotelinth-21 Get to it. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Barney 0 Posted April 23, 2010 Share Posted April 23, 2010 The missus doesn't have the patience for it. There's fuck all else on tv these days though, so might try and convince her again. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Park Life 71 Posted April 23, 2010 Share Posted April 23, 2010 (edited) Looks like 'The Wire' with a bacdrop of poverty err post hurricane catastrohe, I mean black people - tough times, I mean black people , I mena poverteeee sheeeet, with Jazz and guns and ain't we soooo happy we made it thr..."I'm good"...You good baby?" Yeah I'm good..." etc Dragi it out over 5 series and 50 eps....etc... Looks good. Edited April 23, 2010 by Park Life Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Besty 4 Posted April 23, 2010 Share Posted April 23, 2010 I've watched the first episode of this and the first episode of The Wire, don't know what to continue watching! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Park Life 71 Posted April 23, 2010 Share Posted April 23, 2010 I've watched the first episode of this and the first episode of The Wire, don't know what to continue watching! First ep of the Wire!!??! In your timeline have we just been relegated? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted May 19, 2010 Author Share Posted May 19, 2010 I love it for the music alone. ..and Lester Freamon dresssed in his big bird coustume as the mardi gras chief has to be TV highlight of the year so far Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sammynb 3353 Posted May 20, 2010 Share Posted May 20, 2010 I've just started watching Generation Kill. How come when they talk of Simon they don't say of The Wire & Generation Kill? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
The Fish 10793 Posted May 20, 2010 Share Posted May 20, 2010 guess GK was too short and didn't capture the imagination of the masses like The Wire did Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sammynb 3353 Posted May 20, 2010 Share Posted May 20, 2010 Could also be that it was shite, although after only watching the 1st episode I can't confirm that. Homicide Life on the Street deserves far more recognition than it gets btw. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted May 20, 2010 Author Share Posted May 20, 2010 I've just started watching Generation Kill.How come when they talk of Simon they don't say of The Wire & Generation Kill? Suppose it's because he only adapted Evan Wright's book for TV. Wheras he wrote The Wire/Homicide/The Corner himself. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted May 20, 2010 Author Share Posted May 20, 2010 Generation Kill is mint. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Southern Geordie 1 Posted May 20, 2010 Share Posted May 20, 2010 I heard the actor that plays 'Bunk' in The Wire is in this show... Hopefully his character is half as good as he was in the wire. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted May 20, 2010 Author Share Posted May 20, 2010 I heard the actor that plays 'Bunk' in The Wire is in this show... Hopefully his character is half as good as he was in the wire. He's not been as funny so far...apart from when he was shagging a stripper from behind. There's loads of Wire & Corner actors in it though. Bunk, Lester/Fat Curt, Prez, Slim Charles, Fran and Walon so far. There's new ones that pop up every week. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Park Life 71 Posted May 20, 2010 Share Posted May 20, 2010 Are we meant to be watching this cause there is poeple from the wire in it? Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted May 20, 2010 Author Share Posted May 20, 2010 Are we meant to be watching this cause there is poeple from the wire in it? No. It's just a bonus. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
sammynb 3353 Posted September 28, 2010 Share Posted September 28, 2010 Thoughts? It finished here a couple of weeks ago and I really enjoyed it, the lass thought it was shite and was disappointed because she loved the wire. Also liked the way Goodman wasn't credited, nice touch from him - fuck you fucking fuck fucks Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted September 28, 2010 Author Share Posted September 28, 2010 (edited) Still haven't watched the last episodes. Must get round to it. Probably says something about the shows lack of direction. Edited December 26, 2010 by Happy Face Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Kevin S. Assilleekunt 1 Posted September 28, 2010 Share Posted September 28, 2010 Is this any good? Heard that Freeman from the wire dances round in a chicken suit on Mardis Gras, sounds good. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted December 27, 2010 Author Share Posted December 27, 2010 Finished it this morning. Had me in tears. Not as devastating as the end of the first series of The Wire, but I'm looking forward to series 2. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Happy Face 29 Posted March 14, 2011 Author Share Posted March 14, 2011 Episode 1 of Season 2 of Treme, the HBO television drama set in New Orleans three months after Katrina, will debut at SXSW this week. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Besty 4 Posted March 14, 2011 Share Posted March 14, 2011 Still haven't got round to watching this, watched the first ep a looong time ago but never got round to the second! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Create an account or sign in to comment
You need to be a member in order to leave a comment
Create an account
Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!
Register a new accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now