Jim Carrey gets serious in Kidding
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12 August 2019

Jim Carrey gets serious in Kidding

Jim Carrey is best known for his slapstick humour, over-the-top facial expressions and ability to find a joke in any situation. But when you watch his dark comedy series Kidding (2018-current, stream it on Showmax here, with a new episode added every Friday), you’re getting a very different Jim.

His character Jeff Piccirillo entertains kids by day as Jeff Pickles on his long-running puppet show Mr Pickles’ Puppet Time. But when the cameras stop rolling, Jeff shrinks back into a very dark, very deep hole of depression. And it’s something Jim is all too familiar with, saying of his private life, “At this point, I don’t have depression. I had that for years, but now, when the rain comes, it rains but it doesn’t stay. It doesn’t stay long enough to immerse me and drown me anymore.”

Dragged down

The timeline jumps around a little in Kidding, so you need to pay attention to each scene to figure out when it’s taking place. The show starts a year after the death of one of Jeff’s twin sons. Jeff is trying to make the best of a very difficult world that he finds himself living in. His wife Jill (Judy Greer) has thrown him out and she’s got a new boyfriend … or three. Their son, Will (Cole Allen, who also plays dead son Phil in flashbacks), is rebelling in the most aggressive and abrasive ways, swearing, smoking and trying to hide a beehive in his mother’s car. And Jeff’s dad, Sebastian (Frank Langella), is doing everything in his power to hold Puppet Time, the show he created, together as Jeff falls apart and questions who he is.

“This show is the idea of identity, the search for identity, what it is, who we are, what’s an authentic person – it’s a theme that has always been attractive to me,” explains 57-year-old Jim. “There’s something in this [show] that calls to me as far as the idea of being hit by a freight train in life and trying to hang on to the idea of yourself before it happens that’s really attractive.”

At every turn, Jeff feels like he’s being tested. He wants Judy to take him back. She’s got zero interest. He wants Will to behave and be a “normal” boy. The teen isn’t ready to confront losing his twin and won’t be told what to do. Jeff has new creative ideas for Puppet Time. But Seb uses his executive producer power to get his way – and no one says otherwise. And that’s Jeff’s biggest problem: he wants his world of peace and it’s not going to happen. So he desperately clings to the positive in every situation even when the rose in his hand is rotten.

Dark matter

Kidding isn’t your typical comedy, and it doesn’t make light of the reality of depression. In fact, it smacks you in the face with a handbag full of bricks. It’s bleak at times, not in the same way as The Handmaid’s Tale (2017-current, stream it on Showmax here). Kidding is tackling something that exists here and now. Depression isn’t something you can understand until you’ve experienced it, which makes Jim’s casting even more important – because he knows what it’s like and give it somewhat of a face. “Everything I do risks the total destruction of the piece. I’m often going, ‘God damn it, if this doesn’t work, I’ve put so much effort into this. But if you don’t do it, you’ll never reach some sublime thing, something that will really touch someone. Those are always the risks that go to the edge of destroying something you really care about,” says the actor.

A friend in need

The show is the brainchild of Dave Holstein, a former staff writer on dramedy series Weeds (2005-2012), but he says that most important thing was getting Jim and director Michel Gondry (who directed Jim’s 2004 drama film Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind) onboard. After that, everything fell into place. “Jim had had the script for about a year and a half. His producing partner told me, ‘Jim has been reticent to do television because, from his perspective, that’s not where movie stars go to work. It’s where they go to die. But if Michel does it, Jim’s gonna do it.’ Michel was in LA for a whole 48 hours in-between filming a commercial in Chile. We had to make everything work during those 48 hours – and we did,” says Dave.

Stream Kidding on Showmax at the same time as it shows on M-Net, with new weekly episodes every Friday at 22:30.

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