The Deuce works a vibrant hustle
HBO series dense with filthy, indomitable life
The theme song to HBO’s “The Deuce,” Curtis Mayfield’s funk classic, “(Don’t Worry) If There’s a Hell Below, We’re All Going to Go,” pretty well sums up David Simon’s artistic credo: Sisters Brothers and the whiteys Blacks and the crackers Police and their backers They’re all political actors “The Deuce,” beginning Sunday, is about the sex trade in the same way that Simon’s “The Wire” was about drugs, his “Treme” was about jazz and his “Show Me a Hero” was about zoning. Each of Simon’s works is ultimately about systems: people of different classes, races and levels of power, whose choices define an economy and a society.
That macro idea makes “The Deuce” smart. Its micro detail — a Studs Terkelesque catalogue of the million ways to chase a hustle — makes it art.
The series opens in grotty 1971 Times Square, in the pre-Disney days of oral sex in phone booths and rats in the blue-movie theatres. The screen oozes stale air and garbage. But there’s cash being made selling flesh, and where there’s money, power will follow: first the illicit Mafia-run massage parlours, then the lucrative legal porn industry.
As the prostitute Candy (Maggie Gyllenhaal) puts it, adding a profanity for emphasis, “It’s America, right? When did we ever leave a dollar for the other guy to pick up?”
There are a million ways this idea could have gone south, with two men ( Simon and his co-creator George Pelecanos) telling a story of sexploitation in the era of blaxploitation. One danger is prurience, the Achilles’ groin of HBO series like “Game of Thrones.” The other is a high-minded, punitive bleakness.
“The Deuce” is savvy about the problem and solves it organically. It makes its characters people before they’re bodies or concepts. It’s not fun, exactly, but it has a menschy, working-stiff sense of humour. The nudity is copious and graphic but matter-of-f act and close to equalopportunity. (The show may well set an HBO penis record.)
Women directed half the episodes, including Michelle MacLaren (“Breaking Bad”) on the pilot and the finale. The value of the female gaze behind the camera is echoed in Candy’s story, as she learns the ropes of porn production.
Above all, “The Deuce” operates on a clarifying principle: Sex work is work. It has labour-management issues, logistics, legal hassles, risk- reward calculations and hierarchies. It’s exploitative and sometimes deadly in a way most jobs aren’t. But at heart, it’s pure capitalism: desire quantified in $20 bills and in the quarters pumped into peep-show booths.
The first episode puts it plainly when a client asks Candy for a sec- ond round free after he completes his end of the transaction prematurely. You wouldn’t ask a car dealer to give you two cars for the price of one, she says: “This is my job.”
Gyllenhaal’s performance is canny and layered: a freelancer with no pimp, Candy has to entice clients and manage them, one eye on the future, one on the next 30 minutes.
The show’s other big name is James Franco, playing identical twins: Vincent, a hardworking barkeep, and Frankie, a hard-gambling black sheep. (In a neat trick, one Franco snatches a wad of bills out of the other Franco’s hand.) There’s little to distinguish them physically — they have shared custody of Burt Reynolds’ moustache — so Franco does it with attitude: Vincent shleps a fifty-pound sack of worries that the carefree Frankie has been filling up all his life.
Franco is more the show’s fulcrum than its star. Vincent’s bar is home base for a vast demimonde ensemble: mobsters, cops, pimps, pornographers, construction workers, streetwalkers and the post-Stonewall gay community. The story also folds in a Camusquoting NYU dropout (Margarita Levieva) and Sandra (Natalie Paul), a reporter doing an investigation on prostitution.
“The Deuce” is a textbook demonstration of how to set up multiple character threads. But man, is there a lot of setup, and the porn story line — ostensibly the subject of the series — has barely started by the time the eight-episode first season ends.
TV is full of dramas that take ages to become the thing they’re about; see, recently, “Snowfall” and “Ozark.” This is less a problem for “The Deuce” because it’s so rich with voice. This should be a lesson for peak-TV storytellers: Get the characters right first, and viewers will float you some credit for the plot.
What “The Deuce” has from the get-go is filthy, vibrant, indomitable life. Most of the action is conversation. A pair of pimps liken Richard Nixon’s Vietnam brinkmanship to their own management style. Early standout performances include Lawrence Gilliard Jr. (“The Wire”) as a possibly too-honest cop and Dominique Fishback (“Show Me a Hero”) as Darlene, a wily prostitute with a sentimental streak.
The period detail is impressive, but there’s no romanticism for dirty old New York or easy-in-hindsight superiority. “The Deuce” simply assumes that in any decade and any line of work, people are people.
But its people are also part of larger structures that are just as important. Sandra voices this idea late in the season, when her editor wants to ax a portion about police corruption from her exposé.
“You cut out everything that makes the city a part of it, and what’s left?” she asks. “A humaninterest story.”
The exchange may be a little-selfaware, but it’s well-earned. “The Deuce” is more than human interest. But it is human above all, and it’s relentlessly interesting.
“The Deuce” (90 minutes) premières Sunday at 9 p.m. on HBO. New York Times News Service