"Boardwalk Empire" Creator on Legalizing Drugs and Making Nucky Likeable Again

Posted: Published on December 5th, 2012

This post was added by Dr P. Richardson

NEW YORK (TheWrap.com) - The prohibition drama "Boardwalk Empire" wrapped its spectacular third season Sunday night just weeks after the states of Colorado and Washington voted to legalize marijuana.

To "Boardwalk" creator Terence Winter, who has immersed himself in the history of prohibition to research his gangster epic, the votes feel like a move in the right direction.

"It's great. I think they should legalize drugs in general," Winter told TheWrap. "The war on drugs is clearly not working, and I think they should take the profit motive out of being a drug dealer. And maybe kids will go to college and do something else."

Winter, who reassembled his writers a few weeks ago to begin work on the show's fourth season, talked to us about whether they ever go out of their way to slow down the action, making Nucky Thompson (Steve Buscemi) likable again, and whether things are worse today than they were in the 1920s.

TheWrap: Is 'Boardwalk' making a case for drug legalization?

Winter: Well, I think history made it for us with prohibition. We're just reflecting the reality of how it went down. I'm not trying to bend the reality or the truth of what happened. It clearly didn't work. I don't think people were more disposed to drink when alcohol was legal.

Actually, it had the opposite effect. Women didn't start drinking until prohibition was enacted and college students didn't start drinking until prohibition was enacted. Leaving the mystery aside might have had a better impact on the country - keeping it legal. In my personal opinion I don't think making drugs legal would make anybody more likely to become a heroin addict, for example.

This is going to sound strange, but I mean it as a compliment. "Boardwalk" has a way of lulling you into looking at the costumes, and listening to the dialogue, and marveling at how pretty everything is. There are times when I almost want to nod off, it's so comforting - and then suddenly someone gets set on fire. I feel you're making a conscious effort to use boredom to really shock us at other times. Do you ever put in a scene that's deliberately slow?

No, we don't. I would disagree and say - slow or boring - there is dialogue that needs to be attended to and I think you need to pay attention to what's going on. The pacing can sometimes be slower than certainly an action scene or a scene with incredible violence. Because we have such wide-ranging characters and such wide-ranging circumstances, some things might seem slower by comparison.

Obviously a scene involving a political figure or Margaret's storyline, as opposed to something Al Capone is doing, is just by the very nature of it going to feel slow. But no, none of it is done by design.

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"Boardwalk Empire" Creator on Legalizing Drugs and Making Nucky Likeable Again

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