TOM TANGNEY

Slick political drama ‘House of Cards’ garners a different kind of attention

Feb 13, 2013, 6:46 AM | Updated: 12:45 pm

I spent the first weekend without football in six months watching all 13 episodes of a brand new series called “House of Cards.” It’s a series making history for all sorts of reasons.

“House of Cards” is a slick political drama starring two-time Oscar winner Kevin Spacey and produced by A-list director David Fincher.

Spacey plays a South Carolina Democrat who’s a cut-throat Majority Whip in the House of Representatives. He has designs on higher office and uses journalists and compromised politicians as stepping stones.

But as good as “House of Cards” is, it’s not the story or production values garnering all the buzz. It’s the method of delivery – and who is doing the delivery – that makes “House of Cards” significant.

“House of Cards” is the first TV series not available on TV. You can only stream it through Netflix. The video-on-demand and online streaming service is now in the original programming business, shelling out $100 million for two 13 episode seasons of the insider political drama. “House of Cards” will be competing with all those cable shows like “Mad Men” and “Dexter” and say, “Girls,” as well as those countless shows the networks offer.

There’s one big difference though. Netflix has made the entire series available all at once. That’s right – rather than waiting for 13 weeks to see the show unfold, you can see it all in one fell 13-hour swoop, if you want to. Binge viewing, as it’s called. That’s exactly how I spent most of this past weekend.

How many others have done the same thing since it was first made available Feb. 1 is unclear. Why? Netflix is not releasing those figures. An Internet traffic monitoring firm (Procera Networks) guesstimates that between 1.5 million and 2.7 million watched at least one episode the day after its initial release. It’s estimated half a million actually watched the 13th and final episode on that same day.

The fact that Netflix is refusing to let us know how many of us have watched the series is rich with irony – considering how much it knows about all its users. Netflix knows not only every show we’ve ever watched, but also when we watched it, and if and when we paused, rewound, or fast-forwarded through a show or turned it off in mid-scene.

In fact, Netflix flaunts its “big data” approach to super-serve its customers.

It already regularly SUGGESTS other programs that seem to fit our personal tastes, it can now CREATE programming that suits its subscribers. For instance, Netflix long before they signed any contracts, knew their users were drawn to political dramas, liked actor Kevin Spacey and enjoyed the work of director David Fincher. So “House of Cards” made perfect business sense.

One of the many questions for the future is whether “perfect business sense” will support or undermine artistic sense. So far, so good. But it’s early.

Tom Tangney

Belfast...

Tom Tangney

Kenneth Branagh’s ‘Belfast’ is a crowd-pleaser that doesn’t quite hit the mark

"Belfast" has plenty to recommend itself but it's not nearly the moving testament to fraught times that Kenneth Branagh thinks it is or wants it to be.

2 years ago

Eternals, Marvel...

Tom Tangney

‘Eternals’ has to do a lot of heavy lifting for a single film

Imagine the daunting task Marvel sets for itself in "Eternals." It has to introduce 10 new superheroes, not to mention an entirely new cosmology.

2 years ago

French Dispatch...

Tom Tangney

‘The French Dispatch’ is unmistakably Andersonian

Wes Anderson is an acquired taste. But luckily, after 10 full-length movies, most critics and many movie-goers have acquired it.

3 years ago

Dune...

Tom Tangney

All set-up and no payoff: ‘Dune’ is world’s longest and most expensive trailer

It's hard to find the right metaphor for the new "Dune" movie. Whatever comparison you choose, it must reflect a sense of incompletion.

3 years ago

Last Duel...

Tom Tangney

Poor Marguerite’s story saves ‘The Last Duel’

Tom Tangney says, ultimately, The Last Duel is a proto-feminist take on the Middle Ages with Marguerite's take that brings the film into focus.

3 years ago

James Bond...

Tom Tangney

Daniel Craig’s final James Bond movie comes full-circle

The 25th installment in the James Bond movie franchise may be titled "No Time to Die," but "Too Much Time to Die" may be more fitting.

3 years ago

Slick political drama ‘House of Cards’ garners a different kind of attention