Anyone who knows me at all is aware that I am a simple man. I like pop music, paperback novels, and action movies. Prestige television has never appealed to me, no matter how rave the reviews. Real life is dramatic and convoluted enough without watching TV shows where reality is dialed up to eleven. Stories about the mob have never really had a strong pull on me either. The Godfather is amazing, don’t get me wrong. And Goodfellas is essential viewing for any movie fan.
I’d just rather watch a western.
That said, I’ll watch anything with Sylvester Stallone, even a prestige TV drama about the mob. Given that it’s exclusively on Paramount+, I’m not even sure anyone else knows about it. This is Stallone’s first foray in to television, but we live in a new era when movie stars don’t see it as a step down. Sly plays Dwight Manfredi, a made man who served 25 years in prison to protect his boss. The world has changed since the 90s, so the show has a fish-out-of-water element that allows Stallone to indulge his comedic side.
He just plays it a little too big and broad for the small screen.
The family sends Manfredi to Tulsa to start organizing some crime. Of course, being the heart of the Bible belt, he kinda has to manufacture it out of whole cloth. The big city crime boss is even further out of his element in Oklahoma, but he has an old world moral code to guide him. Racism won’t be tolerated, not on his watch. And rowdy drunks best mind their manners around the ladies.
Since I’ve only seen the first episode, this won’t be a review.
As I was watching, I realized that Tulsa King follows a format that always appeals to me, and it’s not exclusive to prestige TV or anything else. It’s the same formula that Burn Notice used to great success, as well as Justified, White Collar, and many of my other favorite shows. The hero (or in this case, the anti-hero) is thrust into a new environment where he has to exercise his skills and adapt at the same time.
“There are only two plots: A person goes on a journey, and a stranger comes to town.”
In a weird hybrid, shows like these manage to incorporate both plots. Michael Weston returns home from his journey in espionage and those who knew him before and after find a stranger in their midst. Yet more often than not, it’s an outsider from which he needs to defend in his hometown. Manfredi is exiled to Tulsa, it’s his home now. He doesn’t belong there, and yet he must.
Will this be a redemption story?
I’ve heard it said that a corrupt culture can’t create hero stories. Manfredi isn’t the hero Michael Weston became by the end, but a villain through and through. I hope that the wholesome people of Tulsa force him to confront his dark side and become a hero, yet in today’s climate I can’t hold out too much hope. Nevertheless, I’m entertained enough to keep watching.