House of Cards - Season 1 Episode 2 Episodio 2
Panoramica: The new Prime Minister, Collingridge, tells Urquhart that he is far too valuable in his current post to be offered a ministerial position. Urquhart is furious but hides his contempt of the man under his usual urbane smile. Collingridge, he believes, will not last long and perhaps something can be arranged to hasten his departure. Meanwhile, it might be a good idea to surreptitiously undermine the leader and start maneuvering in his own favor. And, as luck would have it, an inexperienced young journalist, Mattie Storin, is innocently hanging on his every word. He pretends to be helping her learn about Westminster politics, instead he uses her to leak damaging stories about his rivals. As the Party gathers for its annual conference, the scandals begin to break.
Commento
As political dramas go, they just don't come any better than this - and Ian Richardson proves a master as an epitome of an ambitious schemer that even Machiavelli would have been proud of. He is "Urquhart", the chief whip of a government under new leadership. It's "Collingwood" (David Lyon) who takes the top job, but when he decides against promoting this local secret-keeper, he makes quite a mistake. Fuelled by his conceivably even more ambitious wife "Elizabeth" (Diane Fletcher) and taking advantage of the naive and malleable young journalist "Mattie" (Susannah Harker) he starts on a wonderfully evil, internecine and charmingly menacing yellow (or perhaps black) brick road of his own to Number 10. It's written with some potently insightful insider knowledge of just how power-brokering works, with "Urquhart" using his frequently droll or reprimanding pieces to camera to try and justify his actions, his appraisals of his colleagues and deliver his comically potent use of other people's desires to climb the grassy pole, really entertainingly. The ensemble cast are best summed up via a pithily described platform at the party conference when we are treated to his candid views of each of his colleagues in as disparaging a fashion as possible. There are also super efforts from Miles Anderson as the coke-head press officer "O'Neill" and from Colin Jeavons as his almost ophidian deputy "Stamper" as strings are pulled and careers laid asunder. It's a gloriously effective, satiric, swipe at the introspective and incompetent political class, and shows the ruthlessness of a man with a keen brain in a drama I can watch again and again.