Rebooting classic series is tricky. You have a built-in audience of aging fans of the original, but after the initial nostalgia, they will get bored and leave -- unless you give them something to make the show stand in its own right. After all, the original is still available on DVD, right? And new fans want more than a retread of a show from dinosaur days.
Dynasty (1981-1989) was the quintessential 1980s show, a glitzy, trashy escape from the horrors of Reagan's America, about the scandals, schemes, backstabbing, and power-plays of a super-wealthy Denver family: brutal patriarch Blake Carrington, his trophy-wife Krystal, his socialite ex-wife Alexis, and the scheming, catfighting, problem-of-the-week beset younger generation, notably Fallon (who falls in love with every man she sees) and Steven (who struggles with being gay...er, straight...er, gay...er..."confused").
It was all the rage in West Hollywood. There were Dynasty nights at the local bars. Drag queens would perform as Alexis and Krystal. We would bet on whether Steven was gay or straight in this episode. But will a 2010's reboot work?
1. The 2017 cast is much younger. John Forsythe (the original Blake Carrington) was actually only five years older than Grant Show (left), and Joan Collins (the original Alexis) was younger than Nicollete Sheridan. But we have gyms now, and nobody eats transfats, so the entire cast looks like twinks.
2. In the original, Fallon just went shopping and dated, leaving the business to the men. In 2017,she's a vice president of something or other, and is scheming to become CEO. She still sleeps around, though.
3. In the original, Steven was closeted, conflicted, guilt-ridden, harrassed by his homophobic Dad, and constantly dating and marrying women (which was common on tv in the 1980s; audiences were rooting for the gay guy to "be cured"). In 2017, being gay is no problem. Dad sets Steven (James Mackay, top photo) up on dates. And Sammy Jo, one of the women Steven marries in the original, has become a guy (Rafael de la Fuente, left).
3. The cast is considerably more diverse. Blake's competitor, Jeff Colby (Sam Adegoke) has become black. So has Michael Culhane (Robert Christopher Riley), the chauffeur Fallon is sleeping with. Trophy wife Crystal is Hispanic.
But is Dynasty 2017 worth a watch? In a field overcrowded with soap operas about glitzy rich people, does anything make it stand out?
I don't think so. Most of the fun is for fans of the original: "Look what they did with the Fallon character! Look, Michael Culhane is black! Look,Steven is not 'confused!"
Which is good for about an episode. Then it gets boring.
Then we pop in a DVD of the original and relive those golden days in West Hollywood when the drag queens all dressed as Alexis, and we bet on whether Steven was gay or straight this episode.
Gordon Thomson came out of the closet and condemned the new version. Quite the opposite of the new ONE DAY AT A TIME where original series cast members have been welcomed back as guest stars.
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