I obviously like to keep my blog ticking over, but yesterday was one of those days when I struggled to come up with an entry. It wasn’t as if I didn’t have anything to blog about, though. The evening before I had watched all six episodes of Bait, Amazon’s new comedy series, and it had given me plenty to think about. The problem was, I didn’t know where on Earth to begin.
Let me keep this brief. Bait, if you ask me, is a total mess. Huge James Bond fan that I still am, of course I’m going to be interested in anything to do with the character. But as Calvin Dyson explains quite well here, Bait is related to Bond tangentially at most. It’s essentially a short comedy series about an actor of Indian heritage who somehow auditions for / gets cast as 007. It obviously came about now that Amazon have the rights to the Bond franchise, and it’s a clear statement of intent that they’re going to mine it for all it’s worth. The narrative plays out over the six half hour episodes as a tangled, confused, not very amusing hodgepodge of conflicting messages: the series clearly wants to position itself as some sort of commentary on multicultural Britain, but did so with such broad, unsubtle brushstrokes that I frankly found it tiresome. The whole thing played out as a lecture on inclusion coming from yet another person who assumes they know what they’re talking about but in fact hasn’t got a clue.
However, the thing which for me pushed the whole thing over the cliff into the abyss of derangement was having Sir Patrick Stewart voice a pig’s head. I’m naturally going to be interested in anything to do with Sir Patrick, but here he just voices a pig’s head which the central character schizophrenically hears talking to him. We never actually see the great actor appear on screen, which to be honest struck me as somewhat cheap; although what made matters worse was that the lines he was given were so crass and vulgar, the actor was so misused, that the whole thing felt like it was written by a moron for morons. I don’t know whether it was an attempt to be some kind of comment on mental health, but if so it was made by someone who had never attended a single psychology lecture. I came away from the last episode wondering what the zark I’d just watched, whether I had missed something, and wondering whether it was one of those things I needed to watch again in order to understand.

