‘Strip Law’ review: A crude courtroom comedy channeling Adult Swim
βStrip Law,β a new cartoon premiering Friday, finds Netflix in an Adult Swim state of mind, which is to say there was no thought of it being made for everybody. (Possibly including some of the people it was made for.) Itβs rude, lewd, surreal in a banal sort of way, at times ridiculously violent β that is, the violence is ridiculous.
It was the cast that attracted me: Adam Scott, once more the schlemiel as leading man; Janelle James, sure of her own magnificence, not far from her character on βAbbott Elementaryβ; and Keith David, whose deep, sonorous voice is almost necessarily one of authority, turned to good or evil or in between as the script demands. James and David, especially, I could listen to for days.
Created by Cullen Crawford, (βThe Late Show With Stephen Colbert,β βStar Trek: Lower Decksβ), the series is centered on a failing Las Vegas law firm, headed by Scottβs Lincoln Gumb, with James as Sheila FlambΓ©, βa magician and three-year all-county sex championβ he hires as his βco-counsel in charge of spectacle.β Niece Irene (Shannon Gisela), an iron-pumping 16-year-old, works as his investigator; she wears a blindfold labeled βUnderageβ whenever sheβs required to be in a bar. Stephen Root plays his disbarred (later undisbarred β rebarred?) lawyer uncle, Glem Blorchman, the strangest of them all β βItβs 115 degrees out so I put marshmallows in gin,β is something he says as they gather to watch Christmas movies. And David plays Lincolnβs nemesis, Stevie Nichols, the very successful former partner of Lincolnβs late mother, upon whom the son remains perversely fixated.
Much of it is the sort of thing that will work or not work depending on your mood, but generally I prefer the small throwaway jokes to the big gross ones. There are self-reflexive meta gags about βhard-working cartoon writersβ and βreappropriating out-of-date catchphrases.β There are many nods to βThe Simpsons,β including βfrosty chocolate milkshakesβ and James L. Brooksβ Gracie Films logo. The final episode, of 10, takes place within the finale of a βSuitsβ-like legal dramedy. (βItβs against their nature to let something be sweet and fun and airy,β that firmβs bromantic lawyers say of Lincolnβs team. βThey have to make it dark and strange and crass.β) And there are left-field references to Cocteau Twins and Bikini Kill, whose βoriginal bass playerβ Glem claims to be. (βI donβt know what Bikini Kill is,β says Irene. βNeither did I, according to Kathleen Hanna,β says Glem.)
There are various oddball judges (nothing remotely legal happens in a courtroom); βlocal characterβ Lunch Meat, who turns up in many roles; a barman, Mr. OβRaviolo, who switches between exaggerated Irish and Italian accents in mid-sentence. Comedian George Wallace plays himself as the mayor of Las Vegas. A Halloween Christmas episode parodies βMiracle on 34th Streetβ; another takes off on Colton Burpo, the βboy who saw Heaven,β which includes a live-action trailer for a faith-based film featuring Tim Heidecker as a coke-snorting atheistic Lincoln. A virtual reality HR seminar is hosted by βa computerized amalgamation of all five personalities of the Rat Pack,β an immersive Autoverse, in which actors create situations that somehow amount to a driving test. There are the βNevada-grownβ Hot Dates, a sexualized version of the California Raisins; riots occur when the characters are redesigned to be more respectable (βTheyβre walking away from years of established canon,β laments Lincoln.)
The series felt a little off-putting at first, as if it were straining for effect, but gathered steam as it went on, either because the later episodes are weirder or better written, or because one just gets used to being in that world with those people. There is just enough character in the comedy to create stakes in the narrative; its misfit energy has fueled the screenβs bands of outsiders throughout the years. (βEven when youβre a disaster, youβre a disaster for the right people,β Irene tells Lincoln.) As to the famous fine line between stupid and clever, the stupidity and the cleverness are all but inextricable, and to the point.
The credits declare that the series is βproudly made by real, non-computer human beings,β which is pleasant to know, and in 100 years will still have been the best way to make cartoons, even if by then they are only made by and, for all we know, for machines. The thin-lined drawing style is standard for more or less realistic 21st-century adult TV animation, with perhaps a hint of comics artist Daniel Clowes laid on. But the characters are expressive, and the medium is used to unreal ends, which is, after all, what cartoons are good for.