Jump to content

Dynasty Discussion Thread


dm.

Recommended Posts

  • 2 weeks later...
  • Replies 1.4k
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Top Posters In This Topic

Top Posters In This Topic

Posted Images

  • 2 months later...
  • 3 weeks later...
  • Members

How does this board break down Dynasty's run? Mine is

Season 1: Slow start but it does build the foundation as far as character relationships go.

Season 2: Peak. Joan Collins arrives and Alexis is the breakout character that becomes a pop culture phenomenon. This season Dynasty becomes Dynasty as we know it and for me its the only season that works from a storytelling and acting standpoint.

Seasons 3-5: Height of popularity but weaknesses are showing. To me it seemed Aaron Spelling's entire goal was to be bigger and better than Dallas and storytelling logic and acting ability went out the window.

Season 6: Tanked in the aftermath of the Royal Wedding Shootout.

Season 7-9: Off the rails.

I'd rank the seasons as 2, 3, 4, 1, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9.

I recognize Dynasty's place in television history as Aaron Spelling's biggest hit and as Joan Collins's career resurgence that became her career-defining role, plus the influence Dynasty had on the rest of the primetime soaps and on the daytime soaps. The funny thing is, I loved the peak years of Beverly Hills 90210 and Melrose Place as a teen so I thought I would like Dynasty as an adult but on the whole I didn't like it very much. It must be an Aaron Spelling thing, that his shows are products of their time and haven't held up well (that's probably why I don't feel nostalgic for 90210/Melrose and long to rewatch them).

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

The only season of DYNASTY that ever meant anything at all to me was the first season.  The Shapiros' writing was shallow, but they had a great foundation that, with some tweaking, could have propelled the show for years.  In fact, I wager that Alexis wouldn't have been needed had the Shapiros done a better job of casting and writing for the Blaisdels.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

The 1st season was my favorite by far.  (Yes, it was a little slow & sluggish, and the ratings were generally poor; if they hadn't made some drastic changes, there likely wouldn't have been a season 3.)  

That said, the first season had a thoughtfulness and honesty about it.  Who'd have thought in 1981 we'd be seeing a weekly show with a sad-eyed, gay son, and an aggressive daughter who acts out because Daddy won't treat her like a "real man"?  Those were fairly new concepts for TV, and the scenes for the most part were played with love and sensitivity.  

I could tolerate Season 2, which was more-or-less an extension of Season 1, although the focus began to shift from two characters I really enjoyed (Steven & Fallon) to a character that I considered fairly cartoonish and ill-conceived (Alexis). 

By about the 5th Season, the camp factor had become so great the show was practically a self-parody.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

My issue with DYNASTY after its' first season is my same issue with THE DOCTORS during its' so-called "golden era" of the early 1970s: the Pollocks.  Their work on both shows has to be some of the most plot-driven writing I've ever witnessed.  In order for any of their stories to have worked, the "good" characters have to be completely blind to whatever the "bad" characters are doing to them; and most of the time on THE DOCTORS, characters they introduced or re-introduced would be so reprehensible.

Edited by Khan
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

For sure, a big problem with the first season was the writing for the Blaisdels, and for Lindsay Blaisdel in particular.  Bo Hopkins and Pamela Bellwood were good as Matthew and Claudia, respectively, but Katy Kurtzman was so woefully miscast as Lindsay.  A little of her brattiness went a very long way, lol.

If I had been Aaron Spelling or the Shapiros, I would have recast Lindsay with Heather Locklear; and rather than have her on as Krystal's socially grasping niece, I would have instead had Krystal and Lindsay forge a new, mother-and-daughter-like bond that would have placed Claudia's sanity and relationships with her family in jeopardy.

I also would have introduced a new character related to the Blaisdels - perhaps, Matthew's younger brother - who, in time, would have become Steven's on-again, off-again love interest.  Blake and Krystle would continue experiencing problems in their marriage, as Krystle struggles to adjust to her new lifestyle and to Blake's domineering nature, which manifests itself with Krystle's decision to go back to work at burgeoning Blaisdel Oil.  And stirring the pot in all this, of course, would be Fallon, who suggests to her daddy that Matthew, and not Blake, is the father of the baby that Krystle is carrying at the end of the season.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Good point!  On very early Dynasty, the characters weren't (originally) essentially "good" or "bad".  Blake could be awfully nice, but he was also chauvinistic, intolerant, and expected conformity from his kids.  Krystal's motivations could be murky as well -- was she marrying Blake for love, or was she marrying him because he was richer than Matthew?  Steven was mostly sympathetic but could sometimes be a self-absorbed little brat.  Fallon was always bratty, but she had good reasons for it.  But there was never any question that Blake loved his children, and the kids loved each other deeply.   

As time went on, the "gray areas" inherent in that type of writing (and acting) went completely out the window. 

My big problem with the subsequent seasons -- beginning with about Season 4 -- was that it became a "Hollywood writer's idea of how poor people across America might visualize how rich people live".  Most of us on the board are probably friends or acquaintances of people who are very high-income individuals or members of extremely wealthy families.  Do they sit around all day drinking champagne and eating caviar?  Of course not.  They're at work!  Dynasty became an absurd fantasy in which everyone lolls around doing nothing except scheming and looking glamorous.

Obviously, there was a certain appeal to the show, as it became so synonymous with 1980s culture.  You can't discount that.  But the writing and acting ultimately were atrocious.  As someone said above, it doesn't hold up at all.    

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

It held up well enough for them to re-use many of the best quotes in the re-boot, plus they "fixed" a lot of the anachronistic stuff

Please register in order to view this content

Shakespearian stuff right there

Edited by j swift
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I thought the reboot was such a mess.  The team had an opportunity not just to update DYNASTY for the 21st century but also to deepen the characterizations and push for grittier, more meaningful storylines.  Instead, it was just more, high-gloss camp, only camp directed toward younger people.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

I absolutely fell in love with Dynasty over the first two seasons but it was tired to me by the third season. It felt like a classic Hollywood movie with glamour and family drama amped up quite a bit. I haven’t watched in a while to give better detail but I was glued to my screen and it seemed to become plot driven overnight. 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

That type of writing -- "Glad to see your father had your teeth fixed, if not your tongue" -- was what characterized the first and second seasons, making them seem honest and clever.  

After it degenerated into "You'll pay for this, and that's a promise" -- (turns dramatically, flounces out) -- it was difficult to watch, unless you're a show-nuff fan of High Camp.  

Honestly, the last few seasons could've been written by Tommy Wiseau, for all the literary merit and cleverness they contained.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

Dynasty was the epitome of Reagan-era excess and greed. It's quite telling that its run pretty much overlapped with the Reagan presidency. First episode January 12, 1981 was 8 days before Reagan took office and last episode May 11, 1989 was 111 days after Reagan left office.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Unfortunately, your content contains terms that we do not allow. Please edit your content to remove the highlighted words below.
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.



  • Recent Posts

    • This is the perfect way to encapsulate the situation. So many morally-reprehensible stories were foisted on the show and its characters in ATWT's dwindling years. Rape should never be used as a cheap plot device or in a way that degrades the victim. Jack's sexual assault was another heinous example of how nasty the the show's tone had become. The fact that people like Hogan Sheffer, Ron Carlivati, Jean Passanante, Charles Pratt, Dena Higley, etc., somehow end up winning awards for their material, decimates the credibility and integrity of the awards, IMHO. Soaps used to have a solid moral core and did not originally wallow in the gutter, rolling around in filth and depravity just to be cool, hip, campy, or whatever else modern-day PTB aim for. Thank you. Cruelty, degradation and misogyny are not components which lend themselves to successful soaps, which have always been predicated on warmth, family bonds, and providing a comforting haven for their audience. The genre has been crippled because the cynical and ignorant executives in charge understand neither the shows nor what the audience wants to see.
    • Beverlee was on a whole other level from Kim. It's not like they were in competition with each other. I get the feeling that Kim had a slight problem with the super-professional, serious cast members who just wanted everyone to be prepared and do the work, as she seems to like having fun on set. (She's made a few cracks about Chris Bernau being like that). Bev was definitely one of those. But they didn't work together that much. Yeah, they made her manic and also much weaker. She always had a vulnerability, but wanting to kill herself over that guy? No way. Not only that, he didn't leave her! She insisted he marry Maeve. When they did the tribute to Bert/Charita, the compilation of scenes with her showed how much the cast had been almost totally turned over in a relatively short period of time. Nearly every shot was of her by herself because most people she had worked with had been fired, left or been replaced. I assume they couldn't show her with people who hadn't been replaced, like Don Stewart, Elvera Roussel, or Robert Newman because they would have had to pay them for using their clips. It's dreadful to watch. Like she had no connection to the current show.
    • Please register in order to view this content

       
    • A little too much focus on Chad and Cat today but I enjoyed the episode. I have a feeling that Jennifer’s gonna get dumped on though, even though I think that her anger is completely understandable and justified. And honestly, Ron is finally gone; Abigail can come back now.  But, welcome back, Anna! It was nice seeing Carrie have scenes with her mother. Christie Clark and Leann Hunley have never really had that many scenes together and to see them have them now is really nice. I’m glad that both of them were there to comfort Marlena too. Their words were definitely the thing that Marlena needed to hear. Btw, with all this talk of Noah, does it mean that he’s gonna be introduced soon? Amy, revealing that John changed her flat tire many years ago seemed a little random though. I would rather she have said something about how everybody in Salem knows of John Black because of how he was always such a hero. But at the same time, her story also showed what a great guy John was.  I liked Kate’s scenes with Philip too, and her promise to get back at Xander for what he did. And since we didn’t see JPL in the bed, did he need some time off or something? And yeah, everything involving ‘One Stormy Night’ still seems very Ron-like to me.
    • The second photo featuring the late John Spencer is from the Law & Order episode, "Prescription For Death", which was the (second) pilot/first episode all the way back in 1990! He played the father of a daughter that had gone to the ER for a mere sore throat but ended up dead because the doctor on call was drunk and had given her medication that she had an adverse reaction to, after receiving some other medication. So, he will always have that great distinction in addition to The West Wing. (The first pilot, "Everybody's Favorite Bagman", was filmed in 1988! The show was offered to CBS, but they passed. In syndication, it is oddly placed as the sixth episode of Season 1. And Roy Thinnes played DA Alfred Wentworth there. When NBC picked up the show two years later, Thinnes declined to return, and that's how we got Steven Hill's DA Adam Schiff.)
    • exactly. I can understand schadenfreude if it were real, but a lot of this is just an engineered distraction.
    • Days of our Lives S60E204 – Thursday, June 5, 2025 Okay, today’s episode was kind of boring. It was nice seeing Jack and Jen back, but they wasted an entire episode on Jen chatting with Julie - one scene would’ve been enough. Also, why didn’t Jack and Jen go comfort Marlena? And wouldn’t a flashback with Jack, Jen, and John have been great? Maybe something from the Cruise of Deception era? Bottom line - it feels like once John’s memorial is over and the returning fan favorites leave Salem… the show’s going to be dull again.
    • Everything with Elon and Trump is a stunt. If people, and the sycophantic press, are talking about their "feud," they are not talking about Republican plans to gut Medicare, Medicaid, and the ACA. 
    • I can't fully remember, but I don't think they tried to get Beth Chamberlin back. I think Laibson/McTavish likely saw Beth as old news and wanted to move Philip on; either that or have her return only when Philip was closely tied to a new woman. Thanks as always for these recaps. I think I had stopped watching around this time and mostly kept up by reading in the soap magazines. Bridget's degradation was horrible to watch, as the character had grown so much over the years and was clearly regressed just to be a foil for a "hot" couple viewers had zero investment in. 
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

By using this site, you agree to our Terms of Use and Privacy Policy