Pop Culture

Kate Winslet Goes Blue Collar in Mare of Easttown

The gritty HBO limited series explores the same territory as bright and bubbly Superstore, which just ended its run on NBC.

I confess that I tend to buy whatever Kate Winslet is selling. Disaffected ‘50s housewife, Austen heroine, spoiled heiress on a doomed boat: I’m in. I was even there for The Holiday, a delightfully silly movie that tries to convince you Kate Winslet—Kate Winslet—is a dowdy old maid, a diamond in the rough that only finds her light when Jack Black scats the Jaws theme at her. 

So it comes as no surprise that in what might be Winslet’s biggest reach I am sold: as a curmudgeonly detective, former basketball star, and literal grandma Mare Sheehan—with a Pennsylvania accent that may not be accurate, but is certainly fascinating, taking up all available space with rounded vowels and unexpected swivels.

Mare of Easttown, from The Way Back writer Brad Zalensky, takes the audience on a circuitous tour of the generations of people around Mare, enmeshing them in a story about unspoken tragedies, vulnerable girls, and the pervasive sense that life is a journey that dead-ends in this small town. Hopelessness is the limited series’s primary mood; every shabby exterior is bathed in a somber blue-grey light. And then—spoiler alert?—a 17-year-old mom is murdered, left naked on a tumble of boulders in the middle of a petite Pennsylvania waterfall. Her toddler needs expensive surgery.

The limited series sent only five of the seven episodes to critics, so I can’t confirm that the end of Mare of Easttown justifies the means—sexualized violence against a young, vulnerable girl. In a way, Mare traffics in the same signifiers as True Detective, which calls to mind a prickly Kroll Show sketch that posits a drama titled Dead Girl Town. But I’ve noticed the world traffics in those signifiers, too—and in its first five episodes, Mare hews closely to real-life stories of women crushed by our cruel world. And it turns its gaze on the women, not on the violence done to them. Discovering the truth behind the murdered girl, Erin (Cailee Spaeny), becomes obsessively vital, as the show draws you tighter into the weave of this close-knit but increasingly threadbare community.

Mare is a detective story, and in the best mysteries, the investigator is searching for more than just clues to a specific crime. Mare is an investigator, and her subject is the place she’s called home for her whole life, now being overturned and scrutinized as she tries to find the missing puzzle pieces. In a way that recalls the excellent first installment of Top of the Lake, Mare is searching the haunted halls of her own childhood; freeing herself of the past and solving the case become intertwined. There ought to be infinite atmosphere to mine in a mystery story, and Mare of Easttown provides a lot: Cozily shabby interiors populated by the many generations of Easttown residents, including Mare’s own mom (Jean Smart) and daughter (Angourie Rice). Dive bars and broad accents abound. In the midst of unearthing a domestic nightmare, Mare’s courage at confronting the demons of this town offer up a particularly satisfying kind of catharsis, where women paying attention to each other can save each other from the worst kind of bogeyman. 

I was reminded of the under-recognized Unbelievable, and the moving novel Disappearing Earth by Julia Phillips. Winslet is offering a way to regain agency in the face of the world’s devastation; she’s selling it, and I’m buying it all.

Formally, Superstore could not be more different from Mare of Easttown. The NBC sitcom ended its six-season run this spring. The final season took place during the coronavirus pandemic, making it one of the few shows to attempt to mine humor out of our situation. Superstore more or less pulled it off, albeit with quite a few terrifying mask-free moments. The show leaves behind a legacy of approaching hot-button, third-rail topics—labor organizing, paid family leave, diversity hires, undocumented immigrants—and finding an impressively seamless way of incorporating them into the show’s sweet-and-sour humor, perfecting the art of sugarcoating real-world issues just enough to sneak them into a broadcast comedy.

But Superstore and Mare have one thing in common: They are both television shows about the working class, refracted through various rich people in their execution. Mare is full-bore prestige television, from the A-list star and the palette of grays to the precise (and presumably expensive) attention to regional detail. Superstore is a story about disillusioned workers at a Wal-Mart stand-in, Cloud 9, laundered through the sanitizing machine of broadcast television development. 

Like so many sitcoms, Superstore exists in the uncanny valley of slick aesthetics and punchy banter that presents a more heightened version of real life, while Mare, in the prestige-drama mold, opts for a grimmer, greasier attention to detail. Superstore, which is chock full of product placements and edited for commercial breaks, suggests a disposability that Mare of Easttown, with its big-screen friendly visuals, does not; that might translate to audience demographics, or at least, what the executives in charge thought the audience demographics might be.

Superstore is like a reverse The Office (and no wonder: Superstore creator and showrunner Justin Spitzer worked on the older show). Where The Office employees were under the petty tyranny of an underqualified white man, in Superstore the sole competent person (America Ferrera, also a producer), a Latina, becomes the boss, and then eventually, a corporate executive. The paper business was in decline, but at Cloud 9, the problem is mostly that the corporation is too successful: In the series finale, the big box store is converted into an Amazon-style fulfillment center.

A sort of zany desperation undergirds the series. In between scenes with the characters, throwaway interstitials set the scene for the audience, frequently depicting terrible customer behavior—the unhelpful, selfish things people do to make everything slightly worse when they think no one is looking. A woman approaches an array of recycling bins and leaves her trash on the floor next to them. A man with a long line behind him pays his bill with loose change.  A guy with airpods shovels free samples into his mouth. A woman sticks her gum into a teacup; a man uses deodorant and then puts it back on the shelf. Everyone, rather shamelessly, uses the lipstick samples. Despite frequent mopping, human nature is inescapable here.

Throughout Superstore, the characters have a push-and-pull relationship with Cloud 9, where the vast majority of the show’s action—romantic liaisons, dramatic showdowns, and pratfall comedy—takes place. Their attention makes the fluorescent hellscape of cheap necessities a community hub and their home away from home. But their work is undervalued, their shifts are long, and the next paycheck never comes soon enough. They are at the nexus of community and corporation, and the corporation is winning. After the characters attempted and failed to unionize several times, the company closed the store on them, leaving the minimum-wage workers with no recourse except the slim fellowship they had built together. 

There are triumphs in both Superstore and Mare of Easttown. But it is difficult to watch either show without feeling a sense of anxiety about the decline, perhaps even free fall, that the characters are facing—even when the mysteries are resolved, the stories are told, and the protagonists find their way to a happy ending. Obliquely both shows have the same comment: Whatever was supporting these people is slowly crumbling to dust.

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