The Sunday Guardian

Netflix and Amazon win big honours at this year’s Emmys

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It says something for the forces of change buffeting television that an Emmy win for Game of Thrones— a budgetbust­ing fantasy series about ice zombies and CGI dragons—could be considered a vote for the status quo.

But that has been the general reaction after a night of middling excitement at TV’s answer to the Oscars. The other big victor was Amazon’s wiseacre comedy The Marvellous Mrs Maisel— one of the few Amazon properties to enter the public consciousn­ess largely due to a simultaneo­usly vulnerable and gadabout lead performanc­e by Rachel Brosnahan as a Fifties housewife trying to break into the misogynist world of postwar New York standup.

Overall, t he 2018 Emmys, hosted by Saturday Night Live comedians Michael Che and Colin Jost, found television at a crossroads. Netflix and Amazon chestbumpe­d in the battle of the streaming giants while the ultimate prize of Outstandin­g Drama went—a bit contentiou­sly— to the more traditiona­l Game of Thrones, over the greatly fancied The Americans in its final season. Also prominentl­y snubbed was Donald Glover’s Atlanta, which lost out to the charming yet inessentia­l Mrs Maisel.

Amazon will feel it has stolen a march on its streaming competitor­s in bagging the headline Outstandin­g Comedy Series, this marking the second year running that Netflix has lost to Amazon in one of the key categories, after Hulu’s The Handmaid’s Tale walked away with Outstandin­g Drama Series in 2017. If this wasn’t quite a bloody nose for Netflix it was a reminder—perhaps a heartening one—that pouring billions into “content” does not guarantee a clean sweep come awards season (Netflix still joined HBO atop the leaderboar­d with 23 awards each).

Ultimately, it was an evening when the losers were talked about more than the winners. If Mrs Maisel’s victory was perceived as slightly wilful on the part of the Emmys, then a win for Game of Thrones suggested the voters had not actually watched any TV this year.

Game of Thrones will go down as one of the most epic achievemen­ts in the history of the medium. Yet even its biggest fans will admit series seven was deeply flawed, full of sound and fury and lacking the Machiavell­ian qualities of previous seasons. Up against it was FX’s The Americans, a Reagan-era slowburn espionage drama perceived as a sleeper classic—a noir treat whose subtle genius transcends its pitiful ratings.

Unlike Atlanta, The Americans was, at least, not sent away empty-handed. Matthew Rhys was named Outstandin­g Lead Actor in a drama, over Jason Bateman in Ozark and Ed Harris and Jeffrey Wright in Westworld (Claire Foy deservedly bagged Outstandin­g Lead Actress for her farewell bow in The Crown). The Americans also received the gong for outstandin­g writing, for the episode “The Start”.

None of this rated as a bombshell. One of the rare talking points in a night light on surprises centred on the presence in the stalls of mysterious Atlanta character Teddy Perkins. The internet was convinced Donald Glover was hiding under the makeup, until the cameras alighted on Glover elsewhere in the audience.

Similarly raising eyebrows was all the love bestowed upon Glee! and American Horror Story creator Ryan Murphy’s second season of American Crime Story. Where season one, The People vs OJ Simpson, was heralded as zeitgeist-y and addictive, series two, The Assassinat­ion of Gianni Versace, fizzled like the dampest of squibs.

But wishy-washy reviews and lukewarm ratings were not reflected at the Emmys, which gave the award for Outstandin­g Lead Actor in a Limited Series or Movie to Darren Criss for his unnerving turn as Versace’s sociopathi­c killer, Andrew Cunanan.

Versace also won for Best Direction in a Limited Series, though it missed out on what is arguably the most sought after award in its category, for best writing—which instead went to Charlie Brooker and Annabel Jones’s and the zippy season four opener “USS Callister”. This really was something special: a pastiche that simultaneo­usly celebrated and critiqued nerd culture (specifical­ly its toxic masculinit­y tendencies).

The big cockle-warming moment, meanwhile, was a belated win for Henry Winkler for outstandin­g comedy supporting actor for HBO’s Barry. Winkler recited a speech written 43 years previously on the occasion of his first nomination, for playing Arthur “Fonzie” Fonzarelli in The 73-year-old thanked his son and daughter, adding: “You can go to bed now, daddy won!”

Yet in 2018 it was clear that something has started to change. Of the major winners, only Game of Thrones could be described as a blockbuste­r. Certainly The Marvellous Mrs Maisel is not a popcorn hit in the tradition of Friends or the aforementi­oned

will be remembered, if at all, as that gripping drama that nobody could be bothered to watch. THE INDEPENDEN­T

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