Harry and Meghan, the Netflix documentary about the rebellious royal couple, is long and redundant

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I just started Netflix’s two-part, six-episode series HHarry and MeghanMeghan Markle, Duchess of Sussex, asks a simple question that begins the chronological account of her history and her romance with Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex.

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“In the last six years of my life, people I don’t know write books about our history“, He says. “Doesn’t it make more sense to hear our story from us?”

On the one hand, he’s right: the sensationalist and characteristically false coverage of Markle’s day-to-day activities by the British tabloids. created a false narrative around the former star of suit and her real husband, she says in her review of the documentary on the site indiewière.

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under the gaze of others

Astounding statements online, in print, and on TV contribute to a “toxic” culture (as one of the show’s speaking leaders calls it), and the pair feel trapped by each lewd headline. Being under such unscrupulous scrutiny would make anyone want to take back their megaphone and scream to make money with their lives, which is essentially what it does. Harry and Megan.

On the other hand – continues the criticism signed by Ben Travers-, I can only imagine series director Liz Garbus, a two-time Oscar nominee who recently directed another documentary series titled the fourth stateshe had to bite her tongue after hearing Meghan’s rhetorical question.

Certainly a documentary maker can see the value in these questions. Apart from the recent moral dilemmas of the genre, as well as the subjectivity inherent in all attempts to expose the truth, there is still an established process for doing just that, and usually it doesn’t imply that the subjects of your documentary hire you to tell their side of the story.

No matter how many friends and family agree to be interviewed, nodding along with the Duke and Duchess’s understandable complaints, and no matter how infuriating each complaint may be, what you’re watching is not a documentary. It’s a newspaper note.

A long and redundant summary

Journal notes can be helpful when they provide valuable insight into your topics, but harry and meghan It’s simply a long and redundant summary of two very public lives. And in the absence of probing questions from outside the couple’s little love bubble, it’s boring.

As a harmless effort, at least harry and meghan is quickly revealed, stating in the opening title that “this is a first-hand account of Harry and Meghan’s story,” before jumping between recent interviews, news footage and “never-before-seen personal files” to chronicle their lives. .

harry and meghan It’s not made with die-hard fans in mind. Few new revelations are provided (at least, across the three episodes Netflix released on Thursday, December 8), and even fewer established opinions are challenged. When Meghan talks about meeting Harry via Instagram, she says she made the decision to date him based on photos of her in her feed of her.

“When people say, ‘Did you Google it?’” she replies, “No! But that’s your job: show me what they’re talking about in their feed, not what anyone else is saying about them, but what they’re posting about themselves.”

Not only does this fit too much with the spirit of the series in general, that you can’t trust other people and the only way to know the truth is to hear it directly from the sourcebut it is, frankly, incredible.

Meghan needs to be challenged right now. The interviewer needs to go back and elaborate on what it’s like at that moment, when you’re holding the phone, thinking the Duke of Sussex is on the other end and wants to buy you dinner. How else can we believe him? How else are we supposed to fully understand what it feels like when this happens?

It’s a fairytale moment, but harry and meghan He has no time for fairy tales. She has a mission to paint her partner as another normal couple in love; as people you can relate to; as two human beings who deserve to be treated humanely.

harry and meghan it is too refined, too familiar, and in essence too unprincipled to be mistaken for anything more a carefully calculated PR piece. The six-part series only came about after the pair signed a multi-year deal with Netflix and their production company, Archewell Productions, is one of three companies attached to the documentary.

Source: Indiewire

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