The Devil's Whore: Episodes 1-4 (complete series)

Sep 12, 2009 19:14

This BBC drama retells the English Civil War through the eyes of Anjelica Fanshawe, a fictional (though presented as a true story by the drama) woman involved in the lives of several historical figures. Particularly Charles I, who is her guardian, Oliver Cromwell, Thomas Rainsborough, who is her second and greatest love, Edward Sexby, who loves but is not loved by Anjelica, and John Lilburne and his wife, Elizabeth. The title stems from both Anjelica’s childhood disillusionment with Catholicism and God due to her mother’s abandonment of her for the church, and from a name an enemy of hers gives her after she kills a man who tries to rape her.

The drama is gorgeously shot and, for the most part, excellently written, despite numerous historical liberties and some rather unnecessairly gratuitous sex scenes, and the acting is great, both for the characters I liked (Rainsborough and Elizabeth were my favorites) and those I didn’t. I really liked the first half, though the first episode took a while to get going to me (Anjelica starts out rather shallow and uninteresting, but soon gets much better), but was left involved in the second half, which shifted much of the narrative focus to Sexby, who I didn’t find nearly as interesting as the drama expected me to, and actively disliked by the end.

Anjelica has been criticized as being too modern minded for a woman of the period, and this is true, but didn’t keep me from liking her. You can, however, easily tell who you are and aren’t supposed to like by how they treat Anjelica, something that telegraphs intent a bit too much.

For me, the highlight of the series was Anjelica’s relationship with Rainsborough, who, IMO, is the only one of the men to ever come close to viewing her as an equal. Sexby respects her, but mostly sees her as something to be longed for and protected. Similarly, Lilburne and Cromwell respect her, but as something separate and to be considered, not as an equal. The relationship also did more to make Anjelica come alive than anything else in the series (and was when she was happiest, IMO) and was more convincing than numerous fictional relationships that have lasted far longer. Though I’m not sure if that says more about their relationship or about romantic pairings in other things.

Unfortunately, the third and fourth episodes are less about Anjelica and more about Sexby and Cromwell, with Anjelica becoming a secondary focus. Now, I would have signed up for a drama focusing on Edward Sexby and Oliver Cromwell, but I had signed up for a drama about Anjelica Fanshawe, fictional pre-feminist. And…well, the drama clearly expected me to find Sexby fascinating and morally ambiguous, and his one-sided love for Anjelica tragic and epic. Sadly, I found him dull, and his love for Anjelica more on the creepy side. I mean, it seemed more obsession to me than love, as he was basically obsessed with her from the moment he saw her (mindlessly flitting around, about to marry someone else) to the point where he steals her wedding garters and carries them around to sniff. I enjoyed their interactions on a platonic level, but was always uncomfortable with the romantic aspect, and then it took a turn that was very much for the worse for me.

Rainsborough asks Sexby to take care of Anjelica if anything happens to him. After Rainsborough’s death, Anjelica is arrested and tried for murder. Sexby rescues her, and asks her to marry him so that she’ll have his name and status for protection. He agrees not to interfere with her life (the show, at least, never allows him to have the illusion that she returned his feelings or ever thought of him as more than a valued friend) or with any future loves that she has. (And I like that, even though Anjelica doesn’t really think she’ll love anyone after Rainsborough-and I don’t think she does, at least, not the same way-she doesn’t intend to spend her life alone.) The next time they meet, she’s travelling with a man she’s met in between, and he immediately assumes the man is Anjelica’s lover, and demands answers. The man isn’t Anjelica’s lover-yet, at least-but she’s justifiably pissed at Sexby for his attitude, and when he accuses her of dishonoring him, she tells him that he’s dishonoring himself and tries to leave.

So he grabs her, throws her on the bed, and is about to rape her. When she isn’t able to free herself, she tells him that she can’t stop him, and he finally stops.

Now, in case you missed it, he almost raped her because she acted thinking he’d actually keep his word.

I know a lot of people like the “he wants her so much he can’t restrain himself, but he stops just in time” trope, but it’s a surefire way to get me to hate a character. I mean, how is that remotely romantic, when it’s essentially showing that his instinct is to force what he wants when denied? I don’t care if the guy stops, he still tries.

To make it even worse, Anjelica’s friend, naturally, is working for her enemy and tries to rape her himself so she can be arrested for adultery. So, you know, Sexby was oh-so-totally-right when he threw a fit over Anjelica living her own life and tried to force his will on her. Totally not trying to justify that, show, oh no.

Anyway, after that, I mostly watched the last episode to see his inevitable death scene. I was kinda glad I hadn’t been very fond of him before that.

Despite that, I actually don’t mind when they did get together later, I think because, at that point, he and Elizabeth were really the only people Anjelica had left in her life, and she was clinging to the familiarity. Also, it kinda felt like pity sex to me, as he was most likely going off to die.

It’s been a couple months since I watched it, but, despite certain parts, I did really like it, and it left me wanting more fiction about the time period. Preferably female-centric fiction that doesn’t get co-opted by uninteresting anti-heroes with creepy obsessions with the heroine.

tv: the devil's whore

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