This Netflix Show Hates the Government More Than You Do
Between is pop anti-authoritarianism at its most melodramatic-and fun.


By the end of the first episode of Netflix's teen sci-fi drama Between, a mysterious illness has killed everyone over the age of 22 in the fictional town of Pretty Lake. By the end of the season-one finale, the U.S. government is systematically executing children. Now, season two of the series—which debuted on Netflix last week—presents an even more grim assessment of our dear leaders.
I don't want to give too much away, but on occasion after occasion Between gives us government officials (and those who take orders from them) so callously indifferent to human life, so committed to preserving their own asses above all else, and so utterly devoid of anything like empathy or compassion that they make Dick Cheney or Tom Cotton look like the West Wing's President Bartlet. My fellow libertarians, if you've been looking for a show that dislikes and distrusts the government as much you do, this is it. (It even portrays a survivalist cult as prescient and wise.)
Which isn't to say that Between is a great show, or even a good show. It is probably, objectively speaking, a bad show—the dialogue is often clunky, the subplots soap opera-esque, the acting a bipolar mix of melodramatic and wooden. The main characters are mainly given archetypes—minister's daughter gone bad, poor little rich boy, ex-con with a heart of gold—rather than personalities. But if you're a sucker for conspiracy-theory, doomsday, dystopian scenarios (and I am), Between can be quite fun.
With each season only six episodes long, Between is also perfect for summer binge watching, the streaming-TV equivalent of a paperback crime novel or cheesy-catchy pop song.
And if you're still hungry for pop-anti-authoritarianism afterward, might I recommend Containment? The CW network show (also available on Hulu Plus) starts from a somewhat similar premises as Between: an area overcome by a mysterious illness, a government-mandated cordon. An unraveling realization that government powers are, if not responsible for the epidemic, at least more concerned with optics than saving lives.
Also like Between, Containment features no slick cinematography, no especially witty dialogue, no standout characters—this is pure low-brow, guilty-pleasure viewing. But if you like your summer escapist entertainment with a side of smashing the state, you're likely to dig both Containment and Between.
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"My fellow libertarians, if you've been looking for a show that dislikes and distrusts the government as much you do, this is it."
Given the H&R audience, a better pitch would be "if you've been looking for a show with hot chicks, this is one of them."
SPOILER ALERT. Why is Taylor Swift being kept behind a chain link fence?
Would you rather have her run around loose?
Too late, she's already loose.
She did lose the ham sandwich comparison.
Oh, God, I forgot about that, I shouldn't have touched the subject of Swift.
It was like you were begging me to post that stupidity, Ed.
I should point out that one of those sandwiches looks much more appetizing than the other... and it isn't the sandwich for Jesus.
I could only think, "How much would a prosciutto vagina cost, and can i get it with some peppers and provolone"
My first reaction was "Traci Lords"
Me, too.
I think that makes us old, Gilmore.
So they're trying to milk the market for Battle Royale and the Hunger Games?
... or lord of the flies, or peter pan...
TV Tropes calls it the "Only Fatal To Adults"-device, used to create an escapist fantasy which particularly appeals to kids = "Finally We're In Charge!"
I understand, but I don't get using Lord of the Flies as an example of the genre.
I read it in school (there's a clue right there) and it wasn't very positive about kids running things.
See also Children of the Corn.
Its maybe not the best case study - it was just the first to pop to mind.
there are dozens of examples in the link above, and dozens of similar variants. Anytime kids are "whisked away" to an alternate world (e.g. Narnia) is a similar ploy - put kids in charge of themselves, and make their decisions have enormous consequences.
kids love the idea of temporarily taking power (because it means only partial responsibility), and its a compelling way to teach kids lessons *about* power in youth-fiction.
Certainly. The distinctive thing about BR and Hunger Games is that there are adults (unlike Lord of the Flies) and they're *all* evil (unlike Narnia).
And their evil consists of setting the kids the destroy each other, though I don't know if that holds true in this particular series.
*to* destroy
Relieved the masturbation euphemisms are back.
...CALLED "NOT-COOLOSIS"
If everyone over the age of 22 is dead, there ain't a lot of government left. That's more Lord of the Flies than V for Vendetta.
Oh, everyone over the age of 22 in the town; nvm.
I don't watch TV to get my 2 minutes, or 22 minutes, of hate on. However, it is refreshing to see shows and movies in recent years that depict the government as it is - vain, powermongers - and don't depict the government as a collective of benevolent Solons, dispensing justice and wisdom in generous measures. Veep and House of Cards are far superior to The West Wing, and I'll take a deeply flawed show like this one over the bevy of police procedural shows that populate prime time.
I enjoyed The Shield's depiction of police insanity and corruption immensely. It was a great change from the horseshit the Law & Order franchise has been spewing since the 1990s.
1. Isn't that the plot of that The 100 show? Everyone died except for the sexy, sexy teenagers?
2. Meh, only two weeks til BoJack Horseman. Need to finish my rewatch. And if I'm looking to get righteously angry, The Night Of will probably be more fulfilling.
No, in The 100, only the sexy teens get sent down to earth from a spaceship to see if it's habitable a few decades post-nuclear holocaust.
But in effect, similar.
The 100 also isn't gonna win any acting, dialogue, or cinematography prizes, but it's a little more slick and better written than Between
(Yes, I am a connoisseur of bad ten dystopia shows.)
*teen
Try The Last Ship. It's a similar sort of show -- unremarkable technically, but it tends to engross and becomes a somewhat guilty pleasure.
You're an excellent promoter, ENB.
What are you doing here?
THEY'RE DEAD!
I WATCHED THEM DIE!!!
Don't be a Silly-Billy--that's a broom!
If you're looking for programs with a broad distrust of the State, start exploring Japanese Animation.
What titles would you recommend? I love the animation but don't want to watch something for children.
Watch Firefly (not anime). Then Cowboy Bebop. Then Samurai Champloo. Then come back and we can fan-girl together about glorious single season shows.
Sam Champ is a lot of fun. I think I've got about half a dozen eps left.
What's funny is, I never thought of sunflowers as really smelling like anything.
Fullmetal Alchemist (the older, non-Brotherhood version, imo) is very anti-state.
I'm not sure I'd call FMA anti-state, though it certainly doesn't portray the government in a good light at points.
Another good recent one is Akame ga Kill. Though that show fucked with my head badly.
Well it is set in a Third Reich-like state. And true, it is more anti-war than anti-state. But it is largely about the idea of the state / powers-that-be using war to increase their power.
I stopped watching teen soaps after Joey chose Pacey.
That was such bullshit.
I'll probably skip it then, and just stick to Daredevil, Jessica Jones (and possibly their spin-offs) and Narcos for my Netflix shows.
Oh, and hopefully Stranger Things will be good, even though Winona Ryder's career obviously peaked with Heathers.
The entire cast of Heathers peaked with Heathers.
True Romance was filmed after Heathers.
I consider that his plateau period.
Gleaming The Cube was right around the same time, so I agree with you.
Well, you had to assume that Martha Dumptruck's body type would limit her future acting opportunities.
Considering there wasn't an Adele biopic in the offing...
Hey, now. Remember what happened last time you fat-shamed Adele!
I know. I forgot my place. I got all uppity.
If you enjoy gritty sleaze with your gang-like action and sexual antics, try Ray Donovan.
I saw the first season of RD and enjoyed it well enough, but I don't have Showtime and there are too many other shows I'm watching to bother tracking it down on DVD or something.
You mean other objectively bad shows?
Speaking of good junk TV, I'm currently watching Strike Back, a trashy action beach novel of a show, on Amazon Prime. It was originally Cinemax, so its got hot chicks who take their clothes off, plus explosions.
Didn't Aristotle's *Dramatics* say that those are the two key components of any TV series?
This Netflix Show Hates the Government More Than You Do
I'm thinking it could at best achieve a tie. How do you get more anti-government than anarchist?
Between is crap. Yeah, it's anti-authoritarian crap. But it's crap.
When a show looks like it was written by precocious 11th-graders, its "theme" is pretty much irrelevant. It's arguable that this "theme" is just what kids stumble on when they're writing up a bunch of lines and watching the clock at the same time. Look for the "theme" to change with the whim, the seasons, or the last blog post the writers sort of read almost to the bottom.
She must have left her tits in her other shirt.