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No, Duck Dynasty wasn't the opposite of Downton Abbey because it dealt with a wealthy family resisting the social change of a new century. Major League Baseball was too similar because it was both slow-moving and featured lots of rich people (far richer than I, anyway). Weeds has a brunette, whose romantic endeavors caused complications for her family unit. This is what I was doing. It was harmless fun. Then, Sharknado screenwriter, Thunder Levin, threw down the gauntlet and I accepted his challenge.
I'm going to show that not only can we draw connections between Sharknado and Downton Abbey, but at their core, they're the same thing. Both are somewhat cultural anomalies. Both know exactly what they are. Both are about keeping family together, while navigating extraordinary circumstances. Lord Grantham and Fin Shepard are mirror images of each other. Likewise, Lady Mary and Nova are the same person. Lady Crawley is April. The forthcoming social change in the 20th century is the non-sensical storm of swirling, angry sharks.
Still dubious, old chap? Let’s do this.
First, look at the familial patriarchs of the two series, Robert Crawley, the Earl of Grantham, and Fin Shepard, ex-surfing champion and restauranteur. Both are men whose glory days are well past them. Lord Grantham has seen war as an officer in the British Army. He was decorated for his efforts and returned home to run his familial estate and the community that surrounds it. His life is, by comparison, rather tedious. Lord Grantham’s only responsibility is to make sure that Downton doesn’t go broke, and he’s kind of failing at it.
Fin, meanwhile, is a sports hero, whose celebrity is known only to a niche group. He now ekes out a meager living running a dive bar in Santa Monica. His life has fallen into a rut and he has no idea what to do about it. Fin is a bit lost, aimless. His life has become routine as he doles out beers and burgers to a handful of regulars. He needs something more in his life, and when the shark hits the fan, he finally has something to bring focus to his world.
By their own standards, both men are ‘just getting by.’ As both series begin these men have stagnated in their development, and are preoccupied by the needs of their families. Crawley is looking to secure the future of his estate. Both men have similar flaws. Both men are obsessed with responsibility. With no male heirs, Lord Grantham must do his best to ensure his family’s security by making sure his daughters marry well. Fin, meanwhile, despite being told numerous times that his ex-wife is not his responsibility anymore, responds to danger with an instinctual need to ensure the safety of his family. His only driving force in the first Sharknado is to get his family to a safe place.
It’s arguable that Fin’s flaw is he has no flaws. He’s constantly being referred to as ‘too good.’ The truth is, Fin doesn’t listen to anyone around him. He’s stubborn, selfish, and so desperate to reclaim his ‘hero’ status that he’ll do anything to get it. He doesn’t listen when Nova and Baz suggest safer courses of action throughout the first film, he doesn’t listen to his wife when she tells him she’s not his responsibility any more, and he doesn’t listen to science when it comes to exploding sharknados with bombs thrown from a helicopter. Sure, Lord Grantham is painted with more subtle strokes, but his flaws are eerily similar. He’s very hard to dissuade once he’s set his mind on something, and recognizes that his responsibilities extend far beyond his immediate family. As leaders, both men know that if they show signs of cracking, everyone around them will crumble and succumb to chaos.
"I'm sorry, I don't really care for sharks." — Lady Mary |
Sharknado doesn’t quite have the depth of regular characters that Downton Abbey does, but there are significant overlaps. Lady Mary and Nova are both strong characters who are unsatisfied with their lives. Both seek romance in the wrong places. Both characters are restless. Both are conflicted, completely at odds with their base needs. While Nova struggles between seeking affection from and willingness to do anything for the series patriarch, Fin, Lady Mary is torn between rebellion against and devotion to both her father and her duty. Also, both ultimately come to the conclusion that they have to concede their own needs to serve the greater good. Nova steps aside so that Fin can reconnect with his true love, April, and Mary accepts her duty and recognizes that her initially loveless marriage to Matthew will save her home and community. Plus, Nova hates sharks almost as much as Lady Mary hates her sister, Edith.
As for Lady Cora, the Countess of Grantham, and Fin’s ex and future wife, April, we have matriarchs with a unique, and somewhat anomalous characteristic as an identifier. Lady Cora is an American living among English nobility, and April has a robot-hand that’s also a secretly a chainsaw. Am I saying being an Amercian is equal to a robot-chainsaw hand? At the risk of editorializing, I am. This makes them curiosities in their respective worlds. As characters, however, both are just kind of there. Both are without any real needs or desires beyond family, and are completely defined by their relationships to others. They seem there more to serve plot than character. If either April or Lady Grantham were to die, neither series would really suffer from their loss. I’ll also point out that April does also share a very important characteristic with the wizened Lady Violet in that they represent the past. Meaning, Fin and Lord Grantham will do anything to please them.
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As for their cultural significance, the fact that Downton Abbey, a melodramatic soap opera delivered with critical levels of British stiff-upper-lipped-ness, has reached pop-culture status is kind of a miracle. It’s a BBC show shown on PBS. Two things many Americans may not have heard of. Considering the first season arc revolved around the drama of whether Lady Mary would end up indescribably wealthy or just incredibly wealthy, it’s amazing it appealed to anyone who wasn’t of noble birth themselves. The fact that I watch it, having grown up on a steady diet of Spielberg films and 80s cartoons, says something to its appeal. It’s also absolutely not afraid of wholly embracing its overly-melodramatic soap opera roots for shock value (Matthew’s motorcar death in Series Three) or stunt casting for ratings (George Clooney in the Downton Abbey Christmas Special). And if there’s one thing that Sharknado can do well, it’s over-the-toppedness shock and stunt casting.
Likewise, Sharknado is a glorious fluke. In a world of Mansquitos, and Sharktopuses, and Mega-Piranhas, there was no real reason to predict that Sharknado would have the cultural impact it has received. It caught the pop-subconsciousness and has yet to let go. It wasn’t any more special or absurd than any of the other Asylum projects at the time, but it took hold in a way that has yet to be replicated. But not for a lack of trying. Since then, they’ve been trying to recreate or force the phenomena again. My dear, Lavalantula, you can’t force virality, you can only hope to reap the benefits from it.
Ah, you say, but there are zero sharks in Downton Abbey, so shut up. And as much as I think we’d all like to see sharks fall on Downton, I don’t think we’re ever going to get it, sadly. (But we can all quietly hope for Sharknado 4: I Said, Good Day, Sir!)
In the films, sharknados tear through the landscape without logic or reason. The first film made some effort to somewhat justify sharks in a storm. The later films, not so much. They are entropy incarnate, taking the form of weather anomalies and bitey sharks destroying everything in their path. Just like the slow chaos that threatens to eat at everything around Downton. This may seem like a thin argument, but, everything that Downton represents is tradition. History. Nobility. A man’s place at the head of his house, and a woman’s role in society. All of these things are challenged throughout the series. New thinking, new technologies, new social norms, indeed, a new Century, are all set to upset the status quo and force the inhabitants of Downton to adapt (or not) to their new conditions. Consider the pace at which Downton moves, and the challenges come at the house for all intents and purposes at machine gun — nay, tornado — speed.
In the end, Lord Grantham, like Fin Shepard, just does his best to weather the storm with his family in tact. That universal understanding connects us all.
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