Ryan Murphy’s achieved it once more (derogatory). Fresh off the fashionable success of Monster: The Jeffrey Dahmer Story, the man behind American Horror Story, Glee, and Nip/Tuck is again with one other deeply questionable true-crime sequence. This time, it’s about the 1996 homicide of Kitty and José Menéndez by their sons Erik and Lyle in Beverly Hills. The case was a media sensation at the time, with the prosecution arguing that the brothers dedicated their crime with a purpose to safe an enormous inheritance and the protection arguing that they killed their dad and mom in self-defense after years of grotesque sexual abuse at the arms of their father.
Monsters: The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story is true crime made for a mass viewers, so it's inevitably sensationalist. Just as inevitably, Ryan Murphy and his co-creator Ian Brennan have been doing the rounds justifying the present’s existence, assuring those who they'd the finest intentions, making copious noises about dealing with issues sensitively. “This season is about abuse,” Murphy stated at the present’s New York premiere, “who is believed, who’s not believed.” In Brennan’s phrases: “We finally have a vernacular to think about and discuss sex abuse and mental health that did not exist at the time.”
And inevitably, too, the present has obtained vital backlash. When Dahmer got here out, the households of the victims got here ahead to say that Murphy and co. by no means contacted them throughout the making of the program and that they discovered the sequence retraumatizing. The Menéndez household has condemned this new present in the strongest doable phrases for being each salacious and slanderous, and critics have extensively panned it, with particular give attention to a scene of the brothers incestuously enjoying a shower together. This does strike me as notably eyebrow-raising, provided that there isn't any proof to recommend any of that occurred, and one factor about true crime is that it's not less than presupposed to be true. But laxity about details isn’t actually the core drawback with The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story. The drawback with this season of Monster is that it has no concept what portrait of the folks at the middle of the story it needs to color.
I feel Ryan Murphy is aware of that the “right” solution to sort out a narrative the place it's unclear whether or not or not sure issues occurred is to depart it ambiguous. Surely that was the reasoning right here: that in a court docket case, a jury is given two wildly completely different views on the identical occasions and should navigate holding the two prospects of their head at the identical time. It doesn’t work right here for a number of causes, the first of which is that Murphy isn't a ok storyteller to tug it off. The sequence is a large number usually. There are bafflingly lengthy banquet scenes that appear to exist purely in order that Nathan Lane as the journalist Dominick Dunne can dish out some imprecise expositional background on the sociopolitical goings-on of Nineties L.A. It’s a disgrace that they put O.J. Simpson on this, partly as a result of they determined to not present his face and so all scenes that includes him bizarrely present us his legs or again as a substitute, but additionally as a result of it meant I used to be considering of the wonderful O.J.: Made in America documentary sequence every time he got here up. Murphy’s exploration of this era was very a lot the inferior one when he produced 2016’s The People v. O.J. Simpson: American Crime Story, and it’s even worse right here.
The second motive The Lyle and Erik Menendez Story doesn’t work is that the particular nature of the two prospects you’re being invited to carry in your head—whether or not two boys brutally murdered their dad and mom in chilly blood for cash or whether or not they did it as a result of of a lifetime of horrifying sexual abuse—signifies that, in a present the place the brothers are the protagonists, and by which we're principally following their views, characterization is a nightmare. Lyle (Nicholas Alexander Chavez), particularly, is a cartoonish satan wholesale inventing the brothers’ abuse at some moments and a pitiable little boy at others, with little to no framing to assist the viewers perceive whose viewpoint of him we're seeing at these completely different moments.
It is headache-inducing watching this present and attempting to know what tone it thinks it’s placing. One episode is 29 minutes of sincerely harrowing testimony by one of the brothers about how his father raped him, shot in a single take. Elsewhere, Milli Vanilli’s “Girl I’m Gonna Miss You” performs as the two brothers are pushed off to separate prisons for the relaxation of their natural-born lives, or we get “Don’t Dream It’s Over” as the boys stroll towards their home to homicide their mom and father. The present tries to lean into the Tarantino-esque, aestheticized-violence enchantment of a pair of younger, wealthy, conventionally handsome boys sporting ’80s prep gear and wielding shotguns, whereas at the identical time sensitively portraying the devastating results of generational sexual trauma. It is a doomed enterprise.
But the third, and the most vital and apparent, motive it doesn't work is that the Menéndez brothers are actual folks. This is about as huge a true-crime minefield as one may think about. The accused are alive, nonetheless in jail serving life sentences, and nonetheless keep their innocence and allege that they have been topic to some of the most stomach-turning abuse I’ve ever heard of. But somewhat than go gingerly consequently, Murphy has determined to merrily stomp straight via that minefield and take it in stride if the mines go off and he will get slaughtered by, say, the actual folks concerned in these instances, or by critics, or by viewers. Already, Erik Menéndez has slammed Murphy, accusing him of “disheartening slander” and “vile and appalling character portrayals.”
Cynically, although, Murphy’s method is sensible. Why not do issues this fashion, when expertise tells him that he’ll come out the different facet miraculously unscathed and in a position to get the backing to make one other present simply the identical? It appears that the lesson Netflix and Murphy realized from Dahmer wasn’t “seems like the real people involved in these cases were pretty traumatized by the tastelessness of what we did, perhaps we oughtn’t to have made it,” however somewhat, “loads of people watched, let’s go again.” Not stunning, I suppose, however gross nonetheless.
If that was the calculation, nicely, they’ve been confirmed proper. Loads of folks have certainly watched Monsters. Not as many as Dahmer, nevertheless it was nonetheless the No. 1 present on Netflix the week it was launched. So, tastelessness and ethical questionableness be damned, I suppose we’ll do that all once more in two years’ time.