Alert – Borgen Spoilers
Look at those cheekbones! |
It’s no secret that I have recently become addicted to Danish
drama. I’m not alone in this; a fair
number of the UK population secretly and not so secretly thinks that watching
Borgen and The Killing makes them semi-fluent in Danish, and that they too can
carry off a Sarah Lund style jumper (sweater to my American friends). Is it the
strong, confident female leads? Is it the sexy men with their incredible
cheekbones? Or is it a bit of both plus a liberal dose of incredible story
telling that doesn’t talk down to its viewers?
At the heart of Borgen are four incredibly strong Alpha
characters. Birgitte Nyborg, leader of a small political party who finds
herself Prime Minister; Phillip
Christensen, her gorgeous businessman husband playing stay-at-home-dad; spin
doctor Kasper Jull, born Kenneth, who has totally reinvented his past and his
ex-girlfriend fiercely ambitious reporter, Katrine. As much as the politics and
the intrigue it is the relationships between these four characters that
provided a great deal of the conflict.
A lot of romances have an alpha male as their hero; they’re
not alone, many genres do whether films, novels or television series: thrillers,
westerns, paranormals. Very few have a real alpha female and these characters,
like Buffy, struggle to find a partner who can easily accept her strength and
leadership (I’m looking at you, Riley Finn). Part of what makes Borgen so
intriguing is the power play at home between these alpha couples. Katrine and
Kasper, for instance, are bound together by their past, by loyalty and by love
but kept apart by distrust; their jobs, his lies. Yet when it comes down to it,
they can only really depend on each other.
The Nyborg-Christensens are a completely different
proposition. Older, settled with two adorable children and living in an
unostentatious but divine house (with the master bedroom weirdly just off the
kitchen and fabulous shelving) they are the perfect power couple. They even
have found a way to pursue two careers whilst raising kids, each gets five
years to concentrate on their career and then they swap, Philip is working as
an academic and raising the kids, Birgitte is an MP and leader of a small party
hoping to get enough seats in the forthcoming election to make up a small percentage
of the coalition.
Only she becomes PM and everything changes. It’s Philip’s
turn to carry on with his career but with a wife who is never home that isn’t
going to happen – and when he does insist a conflict of interest scuppers his
dream job before he gets to pack his briefcase and scout out his new office.
The loving, caring relationship descends into silence with Birgitte starts
barking out orders as if he is one of her staff whilst Philip sulks. Her
insistence he resign from his job is the last straw and it comes at a terrible
price. As the series ends Birgitte is alone.
Some people think this terribly unfair, that male
politicians fictional and real have spouses prepared to stay at home and
forward their husband’s career, why should this female Prime Minister have to
pay for being a strong woman, a working mother? They want to see an idealised world
where she is supported by a husband who may have given up a six figure salary
to unload the dishwasher (a lot, they get through a lot of dishes the
Nyborg-Christensens) but is happy to do so – after all women do it all the
time.
Sadly in a shirt not a vest |
I think that’s missing the point. Yes he turns sulky and I
am a romance writer for goodness sake, I am never going to condone an affair but
this is what can happen after the Happy Ever After when one partner suddenly
starts putting a lot less into the relationship. A successful HEA in category romance
only happens after both hero and heroine open up, lay themselves bare, risk
everything for the sake of the relationship. Philip risks the relationship
physically through his infidelity but Birgitte risks it emotionally as she
withdraws, rather than fix it she gives him carte blanche as long as he’s
discreet. Philip is waiting for her to show that she needs him, wants him, she
asks him to put on a façade for the camera. She can’t lay herself bare and he’s
stopped trying.
There are two series to come so who knows how this will pan
out. Despite everything I am hoping for a reconciliation – and not just because
Philip is one of the very few men over forty who can carry off a vest.
1 comment:
Glad to see you have got everything back.
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I'm a published writer and I am hosting other writers this year. I have just featured Jane Lovering and Jae De Wylde and will be hosting Talli Roland later in the year. Would you like to do a shared guest spot.
Let me know.
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