Hartford Courant

Oh offers a tricky seminar in academic cancel culture

- By Michael Phillips Michael Phillips is a Tribune critic. mjphillips@chicagotri­bune. com Twitter @phillipstr­ibune

Satire is everywhere and nowhere right now. It’s the thing so many series and movies tiptoe near, without getting their hands and stories around.

“The White Lotus” isn’t really satire; it’s a methodical dark comedy doling out one or two character traits per character, operating with the mechanics of a whodunit full of tidy reversals of fortune. The new “Candyman,” of all things, actually sneaks in more stealth satire in its tone and details than “The White Lotus,” in its depiction of a soul-sucking contempora­ry art scene and one Black couple’s unfortunat­e career paths within it. Now: Netflix’s “The Chair.” Is this enjoyable, often witty, more often massively conflicted six-episode series worth seeing?

It is, yes, for Sandra Oh

(allow me to be the first to say she’s terrific) and for many choice character details. Is it satire? Plenty have labeled as such, but the label doesn’t stick. It’s satire-adjacent, a brittle comedy of manners edging

by definition toward satire without really getting there, or trying. It’s primarily a workplace rom-com full of fairly calculated heart. I like it because the wry comic elements are so secure in the grip of its sterling ensemble. But I like it in spite of its own slippery avoidance of the issues at stake: cash-strapped, hidebound academia; hair-trigger cancel culture, depicted as a conservati­ve nightmare in liberal’s clothing; and These Kids Today.

The student herd, to be sure, isn’t the story in “The Chair.” (This review contains some spoilers.) Oh’s character, Ji-yoon Kim, is the newly appointed English department head at fictional Pembroke College, a “lower-tier Ivy” institutio­n. She’s surrounded by tenured, coddled experts on Chaucer (Holland Taylor is wonderful as the salty veteran consigned to a basement office) and Melville (Bob Balaban).

The younger generation doesn’t have a chance. “You are going to be the first tenured Black woman in this department,” Ji-yoon tells the hope for the future, Yaz, played by Nana Mensah. “That’s why I’m leaving,” she says.

At the story’s center, there’s a sympatheti­c middle-age white male whose passivity and privilege has finally caught up with him. Jay Duplass plays Bill, the onetime hotshot professor and, for a year now, widower, lately giving in to serious benders and missed lectures. He’s sweet on his longtime colleague Ji-yoon, and loves her daughter no less. In the first episode, he’s caught on cellphone video executing a fast Sieg Heil salute while discussing fascism and absurdism.

“The Chair” martyrs him instantly. As the students’ “get rid of the Nazi!” protests gather steam, Ji-yoon wonders: Go to bat for him? But he loves my difficult, charming preteen daughter! Soon enough the beleaguere­d department chair becomes another misunderst­ood cancel-culture target.

Created and, in part, written by Amanda Peet and Annie Wyman, “The Chair” sits closer on the shelf ideologica­lly to David Mamet’s fiercely paranoiac play “Oleanna” than Peet and Wyman may have intended. If director Daniel Gray Longino had handled the crucial Nazi salute a bit more ambiguousl­y, or just let Bill flail a few seconds more in his hungover state, there’d be some debate about how badly he’s misinterpr­eted.

TV rating: TV-MA (language, some nudity)

Running time: Six episodes, approximat­ely 3.5 hours total How to watch: All episodes now streaming on Netflix.

 ?? ELIZA MORSE/NETFLIX ?? Jay Duplass and Sandra Oh in the premiere episode of the Netflix series “The Chair.”
ELIZA MORSE/NETFLIX Jay Duplass and Sandra Oh in the premiere episode of the Netflix series “The Chair.”

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