As with
most of my favorite characters on Skins,
I like Rich because he’s such a mess.
Though, over the course of Gen 3, he gets his act together better than
plenty of characters on that show, it’s his flaws that are most appealing. As he teeters on the brink, you root for him
to get it right.
At the
outset, Rich is a terrific example of a textbook metalhead. He’s got the leather, the chains, and the
oppressive soundtrack to fit the tropes, and he even has cushy suburban parents
to chafe against. Every day, he meets
the world with squared shoulders, prepared for the insults that will be tossed
his way for being on the fringes. He
doesn’t mind it – he marches to a Rage Against the Machine beat, and he’s proud
to be different. The rub, of course, is
that he’s only different within a very specific box. He looks exactly
like a metalhead; a single glance at him, and you know precisely what he’s
about. He talks about “never
compromising,” about not being one of the mindless, homogenous masses, but
everything about him is so carefully crafted to be a good metalhead. He wears a shower cap to make sure his long
hair looks sufficiently unwashed, and he takes his crisply-folded T-shirts out
of his dresser only to crumple them into wrinkly balls.
Additionally,
he sneers just as much at the mainstream kids as they do at him. It’s understandable – even ignoring the fact
that preferred music is such an enormous, defining thing for a teenager, it’s
natural to belittle people who make you feel small. They can’t hurt you if you don’t care what
they think. However, this makes him
quick to judge them, quick to write them off as frivolous, shallow, and
conformist (and, obviously, as having horrible taste in music.) When one of the popular crowd, sweet,
friendly Grace, offers to help him out with a problem, he tells her she
represents everything he despises and is too busy giving her attitude to
realize what a great girl is. He mocks
her ignorance of metal even as he boasts his own ignorance of her music of choice: ballet/classical, another genre outside the
mainstream.
I love
this storyline, because it gives Rich such an atypical plot for a character of his
type. Normally, teenagers on the fringes
are plainly drawn as the victims, the plucky rebels tilting at the windmills of
the vicious in-crowd. The popular kids
either remain antagonists, or they learn how cool and unique and
special-snowflaky the outsiders are, opening their eyes to the greater
possibilities outside their narrow boxes.
However, the fact that Rich is an insensitive little punk with a chip on
his shoulder means that he gets to
grow and mature. He gets to change. Now, he
doesn’t start buying his clothes at trendy stores or listening to pop music or
anything, because in the end, his story isn’t about the surface stuff on which
it opens. It’s about realizing that
people are more complicated than their labels, and when he intentionally closes
himself off, he can miss out on something wonderful.
I really loved this review. He was my favourite character of season 5 and 6, messy as they were, and I always had a problem really defining why...but you summed t up here very articulately.
ReplyDeleteThanks! In college, I actually wound up writing a massive paper on series 5 of Skins and how all the characters interact with the social expectations placed on them, both the ones who position themselves against them, like Rich and Franky, and the ones who are breaking their backs to live up to them, like Nick and Mini. IOW, I kind of had this Rich analysis locked and loaded, hehe.
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