A Man in Full Review: Missing Wolfe’s Musings

Talented Artists, Flawed Execution: A Man in Full struggles to balance its creative forces and complex source material

Bringing Tom Wolfe’s massive novels to life has proved no easy task. When it came to the acclaimed author’s second work, 1998’s A Man in Full, those translating it for Netflix faced formidable challenges in capturing its sprawling social satire within a restricted runtime. Starring Jeff Daniels as real estate mogul Charlie Croker, who finds his empire crumbling around him, the limited series saw David E. Kelley adapt the book’s meandering narrative for the screen. One Night in Miami director Regina King also lent her talents to half the episodes.

With its powerhouse creative team and A-list cast that includes Diane Lane and Lucy Liu, this production clearly aimed high. Kelley streamlined many subplots and characters from Wolfe’s 742 pages into succinct storylines. However, in trimming away much of the novel’s contextual fat, some of its bite seemed lost. Where the book vividly dissected the intertwined forces shaping late 90s Atlanta from all angles, the show at times felt narrowed in scope.

While ambitious, the resulting six episodes struggled at times to capture the depth and nuance that made Wolfe’s satire resonate. Fully realizing a work so rich in social commentary and complex characters within television’s natural limitations proved an immense challenge, leaving parts of this adaptation feeling shallow where the source material ran deep.

Tom Wolfe’s Story, Updated for Today

Jeff Daniels stars as Charlie Croker, a real estate tycoon whose lavish lifestyle has caught up with him in debt exceeding a billion dollars. We meet him celebrating his 60th birthday extravagantly, but soon a meeting with the bank reveals they’re calling in his loans.

His wife Serena and ex-wife Martha, played by Diane Lane, remain key players in Croker’s world unraveling. Martha especially proves a formidable figure assessing the ruins of her marriage.

Representing the bank are Harry Zale and Raymond Peepgrass, the latter played with supreme smarm by Tom Pelphrey. Peepgrass in particular seems to relish in Croker’s demise after past grievances.

As Croker’s lawyer, Aml Ameen stands out as Roger White grappling with intersecting legal crises. These include helping the mayor on a political scheme and taking on the case of Conrad Hensley, played by Jon Michael Hill.

Conrad and his wife Jill, portrayed by Chanté Adams, find their lives turned upside down after Conrad’s encounter with police leaves him jailed. Jill’s role as Croker’s assistant ties their story directly to his unraveling empire.

Where the book included white characters, Conrad and Jill are adapted as black to explore racism’s toll. Their plight also highlights the disconnect between Croker’s grand world and the realities others face.

While following the core financial conflict, Kelley streamlined many subplots and pivoted the ending. But in spotlighting these vivid characters of varying social spheres, the mini-series brings fresh life to exploring power and its ripple effects across modern America.

Stars Steal the Show

Jeff Daniels delivers a tour-de-force performance as Charlie Croker, bringing the complex Atlanta businessman vibrantly to life. With raw charisma and Southern charm, Daniels makes Croker’s bombshell downfall profoundly compelling. We feel every upheaval in Croker’s emphatically lived life, guided by Daniels’ nuanced work.

A Man in Full Review

Equally impressive is Diane Lane. Subtle and resilient, her character Martha proves the emotional core amid financial uncertainty. Never overshadowed by her ex, Lane makes Martha’s perseverance deeply moving. Her partnering with Daniels creates a portrait of lives forever entwined.

In supporting roles, Bill Camp truly shines as hardened banker Harry Zale, relishing each confrontation with unforgettable gusto. As weaselly loan man Raymond, Tom Pelphrey creeps beneath the skin with unsettling precision.

Despite strong leads, some characters lack resonance. Government roles like Wes and Conrad drift aimlessly through minimalized arcs. We grasp Croker and Martha’s turmoil yet slip from others’ minds, weakening the ensemble. More psychological depth could have powered these performances higher, as dense source material allows.

Unquestionably, Daniels and Lane anchor this adaptation beautifully. Their intensely human work lifts an otherwise sometimes surface-level production. Where script leaves gaps, star power carries us through Croker’s dramatic twilight.

Tom Wolfe’s Signature Style

David E. Kelley faced a tall task in distilling Tom Wolfe’s signature style for television. Wolfe satirized the American elite with equal amounts wit and absurdism. Yet where the novel skewers 1970s Atlanta’s upper circles with flare, the miniseries plays things safer.

Kelley captures the ambition and rhetoric of characters like Charlie Croker. We see businessmen puff their chests and wheel ordeal as wolves of industry. But the series prefers telling over showing their pretensions. Without a strong comedic lens, those in power come across as merely pompous, not quite worthy targets of parody.

The novel excelled in weaving social reportage into outlandish scenes. But Kelley overlooks Atlanta’s cultural fervor to focus on clashing egos. We learn little about the city or period outside boardrooms. As a result, subplots about race, politics and changing times feel removed from context, lacking Wolfe’s insight.

By comparison, shows like Succession embody Wolfe’s ability to skewer privilege through farce. Even their cruel characters sparkle with humor. When patriarch Logan Roy rails against invisible enemies, it exposes folly as much as fury. But the series leaves us cold to Croker’s wrath, missing satire’s power to probe issues with levity.

With richer comedic veins to mine and a lower bar for sensationalism on screens today, Kelley could have drawn us deeper into Wolfe’s world. As it stands, the adaptation dilutes a signature voice that redefined literary journalism through potent blends of fact and fancy. In distilling too much, it reduces potency and propels few to seek out the novel’s fuller, funnier form.

Finding the Soul of the Story

The new Netflix adaptation of A Man in Full takes notable liberties with Tom Wolfe’s original novel. David E Kelley streamlines complicated plotlines and leaves out many colorful characters that brought the world of late 90s Atlanta to life. While trimming fat is understandable for television, some changes felt excessive.

Conrad and Jill’s roles underwent the most alteration. In the book, they lived far from the action but represented everyday struggles faced by many. Translating them to central figures working for Charlie is a missed chance to showcase diverse voices on the margins of society. Their new storyline packs more suspense but loses subtler insights.

Kelley also cut an explosive rumor dividing the city along racial lines that reflected America’s uneasy realities. Without it, later social commentary falls flat. The novel burst with such cultural insights that gave high-stakes drama relevant real-world context.

Some streamlining is needed to fold a massive book into a tight series. But sacrificing Wolfe’s keen observations and reworking key players lessens the depth compelling viewers. We lose a vibrant supporting cast and layered themes woven through intertwining lives.

Great adaptations find the soul of the story instead of repackaging the label. With its impressive cast and creators, this version of A Man in Full could have soared higher with a looser interpretation that celebrated rather than condensed Wolfe’s intricate and imaginative world. Not every creative choice need mirror the page for a new generation to appreciate the original’s sharp genius.

Visual Jazziness

The directors bring experience to the table but it’s not fully felt on screen. Regina King’s One Night in Miami showed a flair for kinetic staging, while Thomas Schlamme set a high bar with West Wing. Some scenes here could’ve tapped into that, like the birthday extravaganza or courtroom climax. Instead both drift by casually, missing chances to immerse us in the spectacle.

The courtroom for instance builds to drama between Croker and Peepgrass, yet it plays out with staid shots that fail injecting us into the action. Their history could’ve been expressed in ways distracting from testimony but engrossing all the same. Likewise Croker’s bash promises grand entrance but delivers mere arriving shots. A touch of visual jazz there could’ve uplifted otherwise standard exchanges between characters.

It’s almost like the experience was kept judiciously subdued when letting loose may have served the material. Not every adaptation needs flashy scenes of course, but some tangibility in certain pivotal moments might have resonated more. The directors show skill elsewhere – hopefully future projects can marry story with a freer visual style that matches the kinetic energy sometimes lacking here.

Tom Wolfe, Adapted

While A Man in Full boasts the talents of Jeff Daniels, Regina King and David E. Kelley, it falls short of bringing Tom Wolfe’s ambitious novel to vivid life. The story works to establish Charlie Croker and other characters, but gives them little room to develop beneath the rushing surface of multiple winding plots.

King and Kelley aim to juggle complex themes of status, business, politics and society in 1920s Atlanta. Yet the series sacrifices too much context and nuance in its efforts to streamline such sprawling material. Viewers see Charleston the man, but learn little of what lies within. Secondary characters fare even less, leaving most as caricatures rather than full people.

The source novel drew power from Wolfe’s close observation of Southern cultures in great change. While the series touches on issues of wealth, debt and racial injustice, it overlooks Atlanta itself and the period’s fervor that filled each page. Without grasping the city or time, its adapted stories become dislocated and dull and fail to resonate.

Talented artists involved gave their best to bringing A Man in Full to the screen. However, their work highlights how truly difficult it is to transfer Wolfe’s giant novels, with all their movements and characters, into another format without losing heart and soul. As an adaptation, this falls short. But for an evening’s viewing, casual fans may find an competent cast delivers simple pleasure, if no lasting impression.

The Review

A Man in Full

5 Score

A Man in Full seems to promise more than it delivers. With so much creative talent involved, it proves how tricky it can be to distill Tom Wolfe's sprawling novels for television. While the series entertains in moments, it never quite catches fire or develops its characters beyond surface level. Overall, this adaptation feels like a missed opportunity to bring an ambitious story vividly to life.

PROS

  • Talented cast including Jeff Daniels, Diane Lane, and Lucy Liu
  • Ambitious adaptation of a beloved novel
  • Touches on interesting themes of business, society and politics

CONS

  • Fails to capture Wolfe's satirical and nuanced storytelling
  • Underdeveloped characters and subplots
  • Overly rushed pacing with little room for context
  • Fails to bring 1920s Atlanta fully to life

Review Breakdown

  • Overall 5
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