Nelson Mail

A series for our Covid-19 times

The latest showcase for the wry, wise humour of Ricky Gervais makes our current situation a lot easier to endure. David Zurawik reports.

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Context matters. Last year, when Netflix debuted After Life, a dark comedy-drama created, starring and directed by Ricky Gervais, I watched the pilot and took a pass. Too dark, too self-indulgent, too snarky for me. Sorry, Ricky.

But two weeks ago, when season two arrived on Netflix, I went back for a second look, mainly out of respect for Gervais. And now I love it.

What changed in the past year, me or the series? A little of both, I think. But the agent that changed me is Covid-19. And that’s what makes this series matter in a cultural sense today. It speaks to the Covid-19 moment in which we now live like almost nothing else in popular culture.

It’s a coincidenc­e, of course, because the series was conceived and both seasons were produced before the virus started killing tens of thousands of people around the world and shredding global economies.

But its themes resonate with the concerns, conversati­ons and questions many now have about death, the meaning of life and the supreme value of having someone to love for the time we are on this lonely planet.

For most of the characters in After Life, they only appreciate that value when looking in the rear-view mirror after someone they love has died.

But these are deep and profound conversati­ons these characters are having, conversati­ons filled with feelings and thoughts too rarely explored on television or even in premium streamed content.

Beyond the fine writing, skilled direction and superb performanc­es by several actors besides Gervais, that subject matter is what makes this series something special.

The show features Gervais as Tony Johnson, a middle-aged, unambitiou­s features writer at a very small community newspaper, The Tambury Gazette. The staff number fewer than 10. Tony and the editor, his brother-in-law Matt, argue regularly about whether they are real journalist­s or not. Tony says they aren’t.

But career is not what appears to have ever mattered to Tony. His life was centred on his marriage to Lisa and, while she was alive, it was a great life, according to him. We learn all that via videotape replays on Tony’s laptop. Season one opens shortly after Lisa’s death from breast cancer.

I enjoyed season two so much, I went back and watched the rest of season one. And even with my newfound love of the series, I have to say the first season was pretty dark. The premise used to promote the show was that after his wife’s death, Tony didn’t give a darn about anyone or anything, and mostly wanted to die himself.

So, he was going to say and do whatever he wanted and everyone else be damned. He described his new attitude as a kind of ‘‘superpower’’.

A typical day in season one started with Tony waking up, lying in bed and watching videos of his late wife. These sessions often ended in Tony’s tears.

Then it was off to the newspaper office where Tony was regularly unpleasant and cutting to his co-workers. And every day, he would pop off to the nursing home where his father, who was suffering from dementia, lived. His father often didn’t recognise him.

Did I forget the regular visits to a bench near his wife’s grave where Tony also spent some time each day?

Dark enough for you? No? How about this: One of the episodes ended with an acquaintan­ce of Tony’s, a heroin addict, dying of an overdose on a soiled mattress in a garage. And Tony was indirectly connected to the man’s sad death.

But in going back, I can now see there were redeeming elements in all that darkness, elements that are highlighte­d this season and make for a more hopeful production.

As bleak as the situation at the nursing home could be, there was a ray of life and light provided by a nurse named Emma who cared for Tony’s father. She is played to perfection by Ashley Jensen, who devotees of the Gervais oeuvre will remember from her work in the series Extras.

Onscreen, Jensen and Gervais seem made for each other. Her complete innocence and total culpabilit­y to his wind-ups were pound-the-floor funny in Extras – and he gave her all the best laughs.

Here, the timing between the two actors is even better. In season two, Tony comes to see what it means to truly care for and help others in the gentle and cheerful way she combs his dying father’s hair. In her innate optimism, meanwhile, she sees the angels dancing on the head of a pin.

Tony definitely needs some of what Emma has, but does she need him with all his issues? That’s the stuff of romantic comedy in season two.

And then there’s the older woman Tony meets when he goes to that bench at the foot of his wife’s grave. Her name is Anne and she’s played by Penelope Wilton (Isobel Crawley on Downton Abbey). Anne is sitting there looking at the grave next to Lisa’s – that of her dead husband.

The two come to share the bench and memories of their dead spouses. As their relationsh­ip grows, the older woman becomes a guide to Tony in the way mythologis­t Joseph Campbell described the role of Merlin in the Arthurian Legends or ObiWan Kenobi in Star Wars.

Wilton softens and brightens each graveside encounter. My favourite moment comes when Tony arrives in the cemetery with a half-empty bottle of wine and the look of someone who has been hitting it pretty hard.

‘‘You should never drink alone,’’ Anne says, taking the bottle out of his hand. And then after a short pause, she takes a long, hard swig herself.

Nor is it just Jensen and Wilton who elevate the series. There are at least another half-dozen delightful­ly offbeat characters in Tony’s Tambury universe, plus a dog named Brandy that keeps Tony going in his darkest moments.

Talk about a guide for our wounded hero, Brandy’s right up there with Emma and Anne. Woof, woof, wake up, Tony, it’s time to feed me.

And all of it is held together by the funny and heartbreak­ing writing of Gervais.

Although the series is dark and constantly talking about death, loss and loneliness, it is not a meditation on death. It is an intimate exploratio­n on how the living deal with the death of loved ones and find the hope and strength to go on.

Everyone says ‘‘life goes on’’, and it does. But how do you go on with life after the person who made it worth living for you is gone?

That’s the question at the heart of this season’s six episodes, and it will get you laughing, crying, thinking and talking about mortality and your feelings towards it in ways that will probably surprise you.

There are stories in the news almost every day now about couples discussing advance care plans, last wishes and wills, matters they avoided discussing before Covid-19.

After Life tells us we are not alone in thinking about such matters, and that discussing them with our partners is in itself an expression of love.

As for the uncertaint­y and fear driving such discussion­s, nothing short of a vaccine against the virus will alleviate that. But the wry, wise humour of Ricky Gervais can make it a lot easier to endure.

– TNS

Season 2 of After Life is streaming now on Netflix.

 ??  ?? Tony (Ricky Gervais) meets Anne (Penelope Wilton) on the bench at the foot of his wife’s grave.
Tony (Ricky Gervais) meets Anne (Penelope Wilton) on the bench at the foot of his wife’s grave.
 ??  ?? Brandy the dog keeps Gervais’ Tony going in the second season of After Life.
Brandy the dog keeps Gervais’ Tony going in the second season of After Life.

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