The Guardian (USA)

Freud review – Netflix revisionis­t drama is a ridiculous coked-up mess

- Adrian Horton

Let’s be clear: these are weird and scary times. It’s strange, amid all the ominous health concerns and precarity, to care about television. But it is, as untold millions retreat to their homes for at least the next couple weeks, a uniquely boon time for streaming content. So it is that today, in a week of unpreceden­ted excuses to binge soapy genre TV, Netflix dropped Freud, the streamer’s ridiculous “historical” fiction thriller which recasts the legendary psychologi­st as a cokedup, seance-enthused witch hunter who uses hypnosis to solve crimes in 19thcentur­y Vienna. Because …why not?

The eight-part show, created by Marvin Kren, Stefan Brunner and Benjamin Hessler, keeps things (somewhat) grounded for about half an episode – the doctor, played as a tightly wound and righteous young striver by Robert Finster, practices his dramatical­ly lit hypnotism routine on his housekeepe­r, Lenore (Brigitte Kern). And it is a routine – debt-riddled and with hypnotism skills lagging far behind his complex theories of psychologi­cal repression, the good doctor has resorted to training Lenore to perform a trance for his colleagues at his academy to prove the “haughty fools” of the establishm­ent wrong. An outsider for his theories of the unconsciou­s and his status as a “Jewish charlatan”, Freud is anxious to prove his worth, most especially to his long-distance fiancee, Marta, whose mother disapprove­s of his “medical” practice (as conveyed via clunky voiceover while Freud pens love letters). He also has less profession­al priorities, as evidenced by the line, and I quote, “Perhaps you would like some cocaine?” before the intro rolls.

Things swiftly take a turn for the weird, when a mutilated prostitute lands, literally, on Freud’s desk, courtesy of Inspectors Kiss (Georg Friedrich) and Poschacher (Christoph F Krutzler). Kiss, a gravelly voiced, archetypic­ally repressed man, immediatel­y suspects Georg von Lichtenber­g, his former military superior, in part because he knew the woman, and in part because Kiss is intimately aware of his sadistic streak; the inspector’s lingering trauma, in the form of a cramped shooting hand, from the heinous orders he obeyed under Von Lichtenber­g’s command offer Freud a chance to demonstrat­e that his idea of the embodied, active unconsciou­s has some merit.

Freud slips from weird into downright ludicrousn­ess when the doctor attends a seance hosted by Count Viktor (Philipp Hochmair), styled as Green Day crossed with Viennese nobility, and his mysterious wife, Countess Sophia (Anja Kling). Their ward, Fleur Salome (Ella Rumpf ), a Hungarian medium who looks uncannily like Eva Green, suffers a bad trip into the alternate realm, one haunted by a blood-stained demon; particular­ly susceptibl­e to Freud’s amateur hypnotism and charms, she becomes his key patient in the quest to explain the unconsciou­s … and partner in a steamy affair.

The plot takes about two episodes to cohere into any sense, by which point it’s clear the mastermind of several violent, madness-induced crimes is Countess Sophia, whose hypnotic powers dwarf Freud’s and rely on a psychosexu­al combinatio­n of touch and verbal manipulati­on. As Countess Sophia’s plans swell from a young girl’s kidnapping to a confusing plot sowing chaos in the Austrian state, the show sinks deeper and deeper into engagingen­ough lunacy. How much you enjoy this depends on how much you enjoy pulpy, gratuitous Netflix shows which make no claims to prestige TV or the concept of restraint. Among the things Freud throws at the wall: blood-soaked nude figures, a torture chamber deep in the canal tunnels, hypnotism-induced seizures, disastrous duels, Egyptian mummies as props, a cannibalis­tic opera singer, use of the shaky cam, dinner parties frozen in mid-air, and, naturally, Freud vomiting a particular­ly large dose of his cocaine beverage.

There are plenty of subplots here, most notably a political insurrecti­on against the emperor whose logic is difficult to follow and ultimately irrelevant; the main show is the slurp of creepy, disturbing manifestat­ions of repressed psyches coalescing into, by the later episodes, a nonsensica­l yet amusing horror show.

Like other absurd revisions of famous stories, such as Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter or Pride and Prejudice and Zombies, Freud is arguably better the more it leans into its ridiculous­ness. There is little entertainm­ent value in watching Freud stumble his way to a theory of hypnosis or deal with his own repressed demons and feelings of worthlessn­ess; it is, however, baseline compelling, in a mindless, “I’m stuck inside and would like to plunge my brain into inane nonsense” type of way, to watch Freud and Fleur piece together Countess Sophia’s plan through a series of unsettling trips into hypnosis and horror.

All of which is to say: whatever suppressed pulp instinct you might have during this time of world crisis, it probably gets some airtime during this show. Which makes the concept of a review irrelevant – you either have an appetite for this kind of mindless stew of drunk history or you don’t. And given the upside-down surreality of the real world right now, a coked-up Freud might be a deceptivel­y hot ticket.

Freud is now available on Netflix

 ?? Photograph: jan_hromadko/Netflix ?? Robert Finster in Freud.
Photograph: jan_hromadko/Netflix Robert Finster in Freud.

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