“The big question for viewers is just one: Who do you believe?”
Whether you are a baked-on Labor supporter, a dyed-in-the-wool Liberal or you couldn’t give a toss for either, The Killing Season is as compelling a political drama as any you’ll find on Netflix.
The Killing Season is a three-part doco that is supposed to be about the Rudd/Gillard Labor Governments. But in truth it is only about two people: Kevin Rudd and Julia Gillard. And while there is a lot here about what their governments did well or poorly, the big question for viewers is just one thing: Who do you believe?
And if the first episode is any guide, the answer is: NO ONE.
Watch a teaser trailer for The Killing Season below. Post continues after video.
1. Everybody lies – and everyone wants revenge.
There are more than a few moments in the first episode that will have you wondering who is telling the truth. Kevin Rudd says that he and Julia Gillard had never had a “cross word or a difficult moment” before he was deposed – but a lack of conflict between two forthright personalities seems inherently implausible and denying it just seems like you’re hiding something.
When Julia Gillard says that she and Wayne Swan would have conversations about “managing Kevin”, but none of those discussions were “leadership discussions” – that seems unlikely too. Why talk about the problems without a discussion of a solution? Who does that? (No one…) More than once during this episode, the players make statements that have you giving both of them a sceptical side-eye.
Top Comments
I think more truths would have been revealed if it would have been done in ten years time.I think it was done too soon
It would have been impossible for Bill Shorten to be on the show, that would have required him to answer questions, he doesn't like questions, especially ones about Cesar Melhem and the allegations that while Melhem was state secretary of the AWU he signed a pay agreement that saved cleaning company Clean Event $6 million in wages in exchange for annual payments to the AWU to boost its membership and power base.
JOURNALIST: Mr Shorten the question was did you know?
SHORTEN: We’ll first of all you have asked me to make a running commentary -
JOURNALIST: No, no, the question was did you know, that’s was the question, not a running commentary on the royal commission, did you know about his individual behaviour, that was the question?
SHORTEN: As I said yesterday and as I’ve said in the past and as I say again today, I will stand by my record of what I’ve done standing up for the rights of working people over 14 years in the union movement, full stop.