The stage is set from the very first episode: some of the more perceptive viewers will recognize the main building where the main scenes are filmed, the abandoned Tempelhof airport, symbol of the Berlin Blockade. There are "border guards" between the two worlds, stamps on "passports", "embassies" and "diplomatic" relations, exchanges of prisoners, all in a sinister atmosphere: everything reminds us of the separation between the two German republics.Counterpart is slow, dark and sober, there are almost no digital effects. We are in a low-tech atmosphere whose offbeat aesthetics can be reminiscent of the film Brazil (1985). The photography and the music - mainly strings - are particularly well done.
As the episodes go by, we learn that the "Munich Flu" is a human product. It has been created by the scientists at the head of the mysterious administration, Management (which we don’t see until three-quarters of the way through the series) which governs the passage between the two words. Very early on, they had decided to create a biological weapon of mutual deterrence, fearing that one of the two worlds would seek to destroy the other4. "Communism is dead", says one of them. "Precisely, mankind’s animal instincts are now likely to regain the upper hand", retorts the other: "one of the two worlds will always seek to annihilate the other. And if we are having this conversation," he adds, "our doubles have certainly had, or will have, the same…"
In 1995, the Munich Flu caused a pandemic in Prime, the alternative world. Could that have happened by accident? Beyond its heavy human toll, it accelerated the divergence of the two universes: it delayed the development of Prime, then led it to a kind of Renaissance. And if there’s a pandemic, there must be a culprit - think of how the Trump administration evokes the "Chinese virus". Or then, there must at least be a scapegoat: once upon a time it was the Jews for the Black Death, today it’s Bill Gates. And that means that there "must" be revenge. Hence, orphans of parents who died from the flu were recruited into an organization that would then infiltrate them into the Alpha world, to kill their double if necessary.
Should the people of Alpha "have to" suffer the same fate as Prime? Ultimately, this represents an age-old ethical question in geopolitics, known to those who are willing to reflect on the consequences of deterrence: if deterrence fails, is starting a nuclear fire still necessary, even when all is lost anyway ? Those who would answer "yes" to that, would not necessarily speak directly of revenge (outright reprisals are prohibited by international law), but would justify themselves by saying that crime must never go unpunished, so that others can be deterred. But does that justify the mass destruction caused by nuclear or biological weapons? Those who would answer "no" stand on more solid ethical ground, but then cause a major contradiction: how can the defender convince the attacker of his total determination to retaliate, precisely so that the event does not occur? Having to be prepared to commit suicide in order to avoid death: this is the central dilemma of deterrence.
The last episode of the second season ends on a cliffhanger, as it should. Fortunately, given that the series has not been continued, there is no need for a sequel. The moral of the story, if there was one, could be: you always reap what you sow.
The Last Ship, authoritarian temptation and national egoism
The Last Ship (2014-2018), an adaptation of a novel by William Brinkley, makes an exception in this respect. It focuses on an American warship sent on a mission to the Arctic to search for the origin of a massive pandemic that is ravaging humanity.
With Michael Bay, expert in major blockbusters (Armageddon, Pearl Harbor, Transformers) and executive producer of the series, we know what to expect: "No cure. No country. No surrender." Written with a jackhammer, played with a trowel, filmed with a steamroller, this homage to the glory of the Navy and the Marines doesn't really deserve to enter the hall of fame of contemporary series, even if there are a few spectacular episodes and the female military characters are given the importance they deserve, which is still quite rare in Hollywood productions. Eric Dane, who plays Tom Chandler, hardly needs as many close-ups of his tight jaws. By comparison, John Wayne’s acting is a model in expressiveness and sensitivity.
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