‘Citadel’ Is a Business Plan in Search of a Show: TV Review

News   2024-11-13 22:03:50

If The Lord of the Rings: The Rings of Power was Amazons attempt to supply its streaming service Prime Video with a homegrown version of Game of Thrones, the new spy series Citadel is its attempt at a Squid Game, Money Heist or Love Is Blind: a show with the global appeal to match the reach of its platform, and a potential franchise that could support international spinoffs. The idea originated not with a writer, director or producer, but with Amazon Studios head Jennifer Salke, who approached AGBO, the production company of Anthony and Joe Russo, with a business plan in search of a creative concept.

As with the underwhelming Rings of Power, that cart-before-the-horse approach cant help showing in the final product. Also evident is a reportedly chaotic production that included extensive reshoots, a showrunner switch and a shortened episode order. There are traces of that turmoil in the credits; the pilots teleplay is attributed to no fewer than five screenwriters. But even if you arent the type to close-read an IMDb page, the origins of Citadel are obvious enough in the execution: a choppy, generic blockbuster-by-numbers with a nine-figure budget youd never detect from the chintzy CGI.

Not that quality really matters for Amazon, which has already greenlit a second season of Citadel, as well as satellite shows set in Italy and India. In theory, this English-language flagshipwill be the center of a whole interconnected universe. But a sprawling structure needs a rock-solid foundation, and the one Citadel provides is shaky at best.

Synopsizing Citadel feels redundant. While technically original, the story could be sourced from a word cloud of the Wikipedia page for spy thriller. The titular organization is an international syndicate concerned with Cold War-era threats like loose nuclear weapons. Its top two agents, Mason (Richard Madden) and Nadia (Priyanka Chopra Jonas), share a sexual tension communicated with braindead banter in lieu of chemistry. (Her: Ill be gentle. Him: Ive got a feeling you dont know how to be.) Theyre assisted by a wise-cracking techie, who largely stays behind the scenes, as they face off against a posh, ice-cold Brit. These cookie-cutter roles are filled by Stanley Tucci and Lesley Manville, respectively, the only two actors who seem aware of the silliness around them and ham it up accordingly. Would that the show shared their sense of humor.

There are traces of a stronger series in the premise. Intelligence organizations tied to nation-states, Tucci explains, have started wars, assassinated world leaders, and killed innocents, so Citadel was founded to serve no interest but humanitys. Should Citadel care to mine it, theres a vein of sociopolitical critique there. Yet the setup feels more like a cynical play for transnational appeal than a hard look at real-life surveillance work and the media that glamorizes it. Manticore, Citadels foil, is supposedly funded by a coalition of oligarchs, but it acts more like an obligatory antagonist than a symbol of extreme wealths corrosive impact. What else to expect from a product of Jeff Bezos, Inc.?

Unambitious clich can at least be entertaining. Here, once again, Citadel falls short of the bare minimum. The opening scene, a fight on a train, echoes that of Maddens hit series Bodyguard, which only underscores how this version lacks tension and sticks the actor with an unconvincing American accent. At less than 40 minutes each, the episodes dont prolong our agony, yet crucial bits of context seem to be lost on the cutting room floor. The definition of insanity is trying the same thing and expecting different results; after The Rings of Power, Amazon is once more trying to buy a global phenomenon without the basic acumen to back it up. The Everything Store has gone mad, and Citadel certainly cant save it.

The first two episodes of Citadel are now streaming on Amazon Prime Video, with new episodes dropping weekly on Fridays.

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