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To make new television, it helps if you’ve watched a lot of old television. That’s a lesson evident in Poker Face, the crime-thriller series created by Rian Johnson and starring Natasha Lyonne, which makes its debut Jan. 26 on Peacock.
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Lyonne, (creator, star of Russian Doll), is Charlie Cale, a woman employed by a casino with a preternatural ability to tell when people are lying.
As Johnson, the writer and director of Knives Out and Glass Onion, explained to Dave Itzkoff of The New York Times, the self-contained installments of Poker Face are a deliberate throwback to a style of TV storytelling that Johnson grew up with in the 1970s and ’80s.
“That’s when I had control of the television,” Johnson said. “And it was typically hourlong, star-driven, case-of-the-week shows.”
They weren’t only detective programs like Columbo and Murder, She Wrote, he said, but also adventure series like Quantum Leap, The A Team, Highway to Heaven and The Incredible Hulk, which were notable for “the anchoring presence of a charismatic lead and a different set of guest stars and, in many cases, a totally different location, every single week.”
Those ever-changing elements kept things fresh and surprising, he said.
Poker Face is not a whodunit but an “open mystery” because the audience start out each episode by seeing who did it, how, and why, before Charlie begins to investigate. Johnson himself calls this The mystery subgenre a “howcatchem” where it's very much about the detective versus the guest star of the episode, as Johnson also confirms to Collider: "These are not whodunits, these are howcatchems. Show the killing, and about Natasha [Lyonne] vs. the guest star."
As Collider then points out, the benefit of these types of shows is that a viewer can jump in at any time, without wondering or worrying if they need to see the previous episodes to understand the story or the plot.
Of course, Columbo is the key reference point and acknowledged part of Daniel Craig’s character Benoit Blanc in the Knives Out mysteries. He told Rolling Stone’s Alan Sepinwall that he binged the entire series during lockdown.
“My big revelation from bingeing it is, I wasn’t coming back for the mysteries. Although the mysteries are fun, I was coming back to hang out with Peter Falk. And in that way, I feel like those shows have as much in common with sitcoms as they do anything else.”
He added, “It’s not really about the story or the content. It’s about just hanging out with somebody that you like, and the comforting rhythms of a repeated pattern over and over with a character that you really liked being with. That’s kind of what I saw when I watched Natasha in Russian Doll, that made me think this could be interesting.”
Lyonne also said that she loved characters such as Columbo, Elliott Gould’s Philip Marlowe in The Long Goodbye and Dennis Franz’s Andy Sipowicz in NYPD Blue.
Speaking at NBCUniversal’s TCA press tour, Lyonne said that Charlie is “floating above a situation trying to crack a riddle, but also an everyman who has their nose to the grindstone and figuring out the sounds of the street”.
Once Johnson had decided to make her a human bullsh*t detector, rather than a detective or a mystery writer, he realised he had a problem but this became the key to unlocking how the show might unfold.
“How was the show just not over within the first five minutes, if she can tell when people are lying?” he told Rolling Stone. “I had her give a speech in the pilot about how it’s less useful than you think because everyone’s always lying. It’s about looking for the subtlety of why is somebody lying about a specific thing. And we found really fun ways to play that at different episodes going forward.”
Although Johnson is red hot and you’d think people would be biting his hand to work with him, he says pitching a more old fashioned TV format got push back.
“I was unprepared for the blank stares. And then the follow-up questions of, “Yes, but what’s the arc over the season?” I think there is right now this odd assumption that that’s what keeps people watching, just because there’s been so much of that in the streaming world that I think people equate the cliffhanger at the end of an episode with what gets people to click ‘Next.’ But TV before incredibly recently, was entirely in this episode mode. So I know it can work because I grew up tuning in every day for it.”
One reason it’s harder to do episodic case-of-the-week stories is the expense and the production challenge. For example, you keep have to bringing in new guests and visiting new locations.
“Holy crap, it was a headache,” Johnson admits to Rolling Stone. “I don’t think we even realized what we’re up against. No standing sets. No recurring characters besides Natasha and occasionally Benjamin Bratt. But we’re very purposefully going for the Columbo approach of big fish guest stars. So every single one of these episodes, we try and get somebody very exciting to play either the killer or the victim. And it was a lot.”
Indeed, the cast list across the season includes Adrien Brody, Ellen Barkin, Nick Nolte, Stephanie Hsu, Joseph Gordon-Levitt, Ron Perlman, Chloë Sevigny, Lil Rel Howery, Clea Duvall, Tim Blake Nelson, and many more.
Asked at a question and answer panel at the Winter Television Critics Association Presentation, whether he writes specifically to those guest stars he replied: "In the room, sometimes we'd have a placeholder actor, and it would end up being them, or surprisingly someone else. A benefit of this subgenre is that it is the guest star's episode, and you see them go head-to-head with Natasha."
Johnson continued to sing the praises of television in front of the ballroom full of television reports and critics — saying he preferred the “pace” of this newfound process vs. film. Each hour-long Poker Face episode took about three weeks (one for prep, two for shooting) to complete. Compare that with making one film over the course of “several years,” as he put it.
“I loved that in each episode we’re in a different environment, it’s a whole new cast— it’s like making 10 mini movies,” Johnson said. “I literally dove into it like it was one of my movies. I really jumped completely into the deep end of the pool.”
Johnson has previously directed for TV, notably on two episodes for Breaking Bad including the show finale ‘Ozymandias’. Episode two of Poker Face which he directed, was shot in Albuquerque, telling Rolling Stone:
“I haven’t been back there since we shot ‘Ozymandias.’ It was so much fun being back in town. A lot of the same Breaking Bad crew were on our crew, and it felt like a little homecoming.”
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