In 1990, Twin Peaks
gave the world a nightmare vision into the seediness beneath the placid
veneer of small-town America. But while one of the many puzzles
embedded within Twin Peaks’s narrative was the identity of the murderer of teen queen Laura Palmer (Sheryl Lee),
the true secret lurking at the heart of the mystery was the incest and
abuse suffered by Laura at the hands of her father, Leland (Ray Wise) and the psychic damage this secret caused his wife, Sarah (Grace Zabriskie).
It’s a reveal so horrific, so destructive, that the creators
represented it in terms of the supernatural, having Leland possessed by a
demonic entity in order to explain the cruelty and lack of humanity
that such a crime would require.
“The act at the black heart of the murder colored the entire narrative,” Twin Peaks’s co-creator Mark Frost
told The Daily Beast this week. “Incest is a primal, eternal taboo in
civilized culture, and some of the greatest tragedies ever written
proceed from it, or lead to it.”
In the 20-plus years since Twin Peaks
first premiered, television’s approach to incest had changed little,
with few shows daring to break that taboo. But, particularly in the last
year, scripted television shows have reversed their disinclination to
deal with incest. Premium cable is allowing creators to push boundaries
with storylines that weren’t previously permissible. And with incest at
the forefront of the national conversation—as classical-music troupe The 5 Browns come clean about the incest they suffered
at the hands of their manager father—it is providing grist for the
story engines of some of television’s most daring and controversial
shows.
HBO is leading the charge here. At
the pay-cable network this year alone, three of its shows have featured
incest storylines or themes, including two such stories—on Boardwalk Empire and Bored to Death—within the course of one week. On the Dec. 4 episode of Boardwalk Empire, a flashback-heavy installment revealed a sexual relationship between Gillian (Gretchen Mol) and her son, Jimmy Darmody (Michael Pitt).
While the shameful act leads Jimmy to enlist in the Army to fight in
World War I, the truth of their encounter explodes into an Oedipal
tragedy, with Jimmy savagely murdering his father (Dabney Coleman) after nearly strangling his mother.
It’s an intense and deeply
disturbing sequence, especially when coupled with the sex scene between
the then-17-year-old Jimmy and his mother earlier in the episode. It
speaks volumes about the damage caused by incest, the sense of secret
humiliation, and the psychological rawness that lasts years after such
abuse has ended. In the case of Boardwalk, it validates precisely
why Jimmy and Gillian, both victims of abuse (Gillian was raped when
she was 13 and Jimmy is the result of that union), are both so
profoundly broken.
Earlier this year, on HBO’s Game of Thrones, based on George R.R. Martin’s intense novel series (the first of which was published in 1996), brother and sister Cersei (Lena Headey) and Jaime Lannister (Nikolaj Coster-Waldau) engage in sibling sex so often that it’s casually referred to by the fanbase—and even the actors—as “twincest.”
While this cutesy nickname belies a deeply troubling relationship, the
incestuous sex between the two characters is consensual, rather than
forced, and is a necessary part of the twisted romance between the two
golden-haired twins, according to Game of Thrones fan (and Lost co-creator) Damon Lindelof.
“In the case of Game of Thrones,
it’s a critical plot point that involves two major characters and
without spoiling what’s to come (I’ve read the books), to reduce it to
pure sex sort of belittles the boldness of a driving motivation for one
of them,” wrote Lindelof in an email. “Ultimately, it’s a love story,
albeit a twisted one.”
Forbidden romance is an eternal
trope in literature (the myth of Oedipus, of course, preceded Sophocles’
play), and several works—including V. C. Andrews’s sensationalized neo-Gothic romance Flowers in the Attic (and its sequels) and John Irving’s The Hotel New Hampshire—dealt
head-on with the notion of incestuous love. “The most memorable aspect
of both of those books was the incest angle,” wrote Lindelof, “but
what’s rarely remembered is that they were also romances. I know it’s
disgusting, but that didn’t stop either from becoming part of the
zeitgeist at the time.”
Lindelof also believes that it was
only a matter of time before taboo-driven love became “en vogue” once
more. While some shows—including Lost—have flirted with the
notion of sibling love, most have found ways to get around it, throwing
together siblings or family members who aren’t related by blood, such as
Brothers & Sisters’s Justin (Dave Annable) and Rebecca (Emily VanCamp)—who actually married after they discovered they were not related—Big Love’s Margene (Ginnifer Goodwin) and stepson Ben (Douglas Smith), and others. (FX’s provocative Nip/Tuck, meanwhile, went there in several storylines: Matt and Emme—played by John Hensley and Jeannine Kaspar—slept together, unaware that they were half-siblings; Famke Janssen’s
transsexual character, Ava Moore, engaged in a sexual relationship with
her adopted son; and the Season 3 Carver storyline had serial rapists
Quentin Costa and Kit McGraw—played by Bruno Campos and Rhona Mitra—unmasked as siblings, the result of an incestuous union, and brother-sister lovers themselves as well. And Dexter’s adopted siblings Dexter and Deb—played by Michael C. Hall and Jennifer Carpenter—could
be potentially heading there as well, if the Dec. 11 episode is any
indication; even more awkwardly they are played by a formerly married
couple.)
In the case of Lost, the groundbreaking ABC show introduced a storyline early on that had stepsiblings Boone (Ian Somerhalder) and Shannon (Maggie Grace)
sleeping together. It was a pairing that led to some feelings of unease
among viewers, but the network was strangely supportive of having the
two have sex in flashback.
“Our approach to that relationship was really inspired, oddly, by The Brady Bunch,”
wrote Lindelof. “Boone was Greg, Shannon was Marsha and everybody knows
that, left to their own devices, those two would totally do it. ABC was
surprisingly cool with that episode … they found it a little icky, but
they liked the idea that Boone was legitimately in love with Shannon and
romantically jealous of her affection for Sayid [Naveen Andrews] as
opposed to just expressing a desire to ‘protect’ her, which was kinda
dull. It also didn’t seem that weird considering that they’d only been
stepsiblings for a couple of years prior to the crash … It’s not like
they grew up together.”
“Let’s face it: Incest is interesting and people like to be interested,” said Damon Lindelof, co-creator of Lost.
Likewise, ABC was supportive when Twin Peaks’s Frost and co-creator David Lynch
informed the network about the decision to reveal that Laura’s killer
was her father, who had sexually abused her for years. “I can’t recall
the network ever offering any pushback, and we were frankly surprised,”
said Frost. “But we dealt with it in an emotionally honest way, so it
was hard for them to argue that the consequences weren’t appropriately
devastating.”
Which is also the case with Boardwalk Empire and Game of Thrones,
both of which take a cold look at the effects that these sexual
encounters have on their respective parties, with the deviance at hand
revealing the deep-seated desires or damage of their characters. To
varying degrees, they follow a pattern of consequential realism
established by Twin Peaks when dealing with incest, which is to show the anguish that typically occurs in real life with familial abuse.
“It was
imperative, given the horrifying truth behind the mystery, that the
storytelling convey the depths of despair inherent in the situation,”
said Frost. “Tragedy is a high-wire act. Missteps are fatal.”
But perhaps
audiences have become desensitized to such tragedy, given the fact that
the topic is being discussed everywhere from morning-news programs to
Twitter, and even in current films. (It is alluded to, elusively but
significantly, within the new film Shame in the brother-sister relationship between Michael Fassbender and Carey Mulligan’s characters.) Yet, incest has also become reduced to a punchline, as in HBO’s Bored to Death, which ended its season with Jonathan (Jason Schwartzman) falling into bed with a woman (Isla Fisher),
only to learn that they’re half-siblings, spawned by a fraudulent
sperm-bank owner. Despite this knowledge, Jonathan opts to keep silent
about their blood relationship and the season ends with the two slow-dancing at a wedding reception.
Perhaps
even more troubling are the fan-derived instances of imagined incest
projected onto certain characters on television. Are we a nation of
fantasists, seeing incest everywhere, even when it doesn’t exist? Emily Kapnek, the creator of ABC’s sardonic comedy Suburgatory, was shocked when fans—particularly a vocal subset on Twitter and certain TV review sites like The A.V. Club and Hitfix—began to imply that the chemistry between father and daughter George (Jeremy Sisto) and Tessa (Jane Levy) was sexual. “It’s surprising that some people feel very committed to sexualizing” that relationship, Kapnek told Vulture
earlier this week. “Is it intentional that their relationship felt
fresh and different and unlike other stuff on TV? Yes. Did I think
people were going to sexualize it? Certainly not.” (Not looking to fan
the flames of this controversy, Kapnek very politely declined to be
interviewed for this piece.)
Other shows
have, in turn, even dealt with the existence of fan fiction (or its
more deeply prurient and sexual subset, “slashfic”) on the shows
themselves. The CW’s Supernatural, which has spawned fan-created digitally manipulated images of the male leads, brothers, in bed together and countless videos, has fans so fervent about the imagined attraction between the show’s central characters, Sam (Jared Paladecki) and Dean (Jensen Ackles) Winchester, that there’s even a terminology that has sprung up from the imagined mythology, “Wincest.”
The show went so far as to have a Season 4 episode in 2009 that
depicted the brothers discovering an author who had been unwittingly
writing books about their adventures as fiction, including “full
frontal” tales of sexual conquest. When the Winchester brothers discover
fan sites about the characters in the Supernatural books, they
learn that there are fans who prefer one or the other, and some who
believe that the two brothers are secretly getting it on.
The brothers then engage in a bit of meta-based conversation, which points toward creator Eric Kripke
and the writing staff’s awareness of the “Wincest” meme. “They do know
we’re brothers, right?” Dean asks. To which an equally horrified Sam
replies, “Doesn’t seem to matter.” Sam slams down the cover of his
laptop as he exclaims, “That’s just sick.”
It is sick.
In a world where victims of incest can’t come forward to accuse their
abusers for fear of their safety or of not being believed or of being
humiliated, it’s disconcerting that a group of fans would willingly
choose to project incest fantasies on fictional characters.
“If I were
Freudian, I’d say that those writers of fanfic are projecting their own
sick desires onto their favorite TV characters,” said Lindelof. “Let’s
face it: Incest is interesting and people like to be interested. What
does it say about me that I’m participating in this interview? For the record, I’m an only child.”
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Jace Lacob is TV columnist for The Daily Beast and Newsweek, covering television as well as culture in general. His work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, TV Week, and AOLtv. A former television executive, Jace is the founder of television criticism and analysis website Televisionary and can be found daily on Twitter, offering his opinion on all things televisual. He is a member of the Television Critics Association and the Broadcast Television Journalists Association.
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.
Jace Lacob is TV columnist for The Daily Beast and Newsweek, covering television as well as culture in general. His work has appeared in the Los Angeles Times, TV Week, and AOLtv. A former television executive, Jace is the founder of television criticism and analysis website Televisionary and can be found daily on Twitter, offering his opinion on all things televisual. He is a member of the Television Critics Association and the Broadcast Television Journalists Association.
For inquiries, please contact The Daily Beast at editorial@thedailybeast.com.
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