Edmonton Journal

Dark comedy Dietland reflection of #MeToo MARK KENNEDY

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If there’s any TV show this summer that seems to have both anticipate­d and fed off the #MeToo movement, it’s Dietland.

The AMC dark comedy that debuted this week features as one of its storylines a mysterious group of vigilante women who murder sexual predators and drop their bodies from rooftops and freeway overpasses.

Show creator Marti Noxon said the 10-episode first season was still being shot when sexual misconduct allegation­s against high-profile men began making headlines. Her team rewrote parts of the show to reflect the rising societal fury.

“Those of us who have been activists and mindful about what’s happening in the culture weren’t shocked,” Noxon said. “But the fact that it took on such momentum definitely was something that we needed to address in the show and we have.”

Dietland is a hard-to-categorize show, an often surreal stew that includes a ripped-from-the-headlines feel, elements of romcom, quirky animated interludes, a takedown of the world of beauty, absurd exaggerati­ons and deep humanity for its lead character, lonely writer Plum Kettle.

Kettle, played with soulful pathos by Joy Nash, is a 300-pound woman — “fat,” Plum tells us in the first episode, “I’m allowed to say it” — who answers letters to the editor at Daisy Chain, a glossy fashion magazine led by a self-involved editor played by Julianna Margulies.

Kettle is preparing for weightloss surgery when she is recruited by a feminist collective dedicated to overturnin­g the beauty-industrial complex. Meanwhile, another shadowy group has taken matters into its own hands for some bloody revenge. Passive at the beginning, Kettle grows more assertive.

“She thinks her life is going to start at this far-off date when she’s thin. So she’s kept herself from experienci­ng life at all, because what’s the point? She’s not thin yet,” said Nash.

“And I think that once she meets the people that she does and gives herself the freedom and licence to find out who she is, she tries on a lot of different personalit­ies and costumes. It takes her a minute to find out who exactly she is.”

The series is based on the novel by Sarai Walker. Noxon said she read it fearing it would end up like so much chick lit, with Kettle finding the man of her dreams and then learning to love herself.

“That kept not happening. It’s such a devious book in that it just keeps pulling further and further into this story of revolution,” Noxon said.

If Dietland seems impressive­ly timely, Noxon actually worried at one point that it might seem passé. By the time she wrote the pilot and mapped out five seasons, Donald Trump was running for president.

“Whether you like him or hate him, he is a fat-shamer and a looksshame­r and he was stomping around saying, ‘She’s a three!’ and ‘I’ll grab them by the p---y.’ And so we all thought, ‘Boy, when he loses, will this still be relevant?’ ”

Noxon, who was a writer and producer on Buffy the Vampire Slayer, before later creating the spiky comedies Girlfriend’s Guide to Divorce and UnREAL, said the fact that her new show melds messages with topical content brings her back to the beginning.

“I’m taking a big page from my Buffie playbook. I really feel like this is in a weird way a sister show to Buffy 20 years later,” Noxon said.

“I hope more than anything that this show helps people who feel completely alone with their difference­s, who feel unseen, to feel seen. And then to feel motivated to be kinder to themselves.”

To prepare for creating Dietland, Noxon said she leaned on David Fincher’s Fight Club, as well as movies by Wes Anderson and David O. Russell, and Martin Scorsese’s After Hours and The Babadook.

“It’s a big juicy soap opera. And there are twists and turns that I don’t think everybody will see coming. I just think that people can look forward to being entertaine­d and definitely surprised,” said Noxon.

 ?? AMC ?? Joy Nash stars in the richly human central role of Plum Kettle in Dietland, an unpredicta­ble new series that tackles sexual predation and the culture’s perverse relationsh­ip with beauty.
AMC Joy Nash stars in the richly human central role of Plum Kettle in Dietland, an unpredicta­ble new series that tackles sexual predation and the culture’s perverse relationsh­ip with beauty.

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