As an actor, Steve Carell has shown remarkable elasticity.
He can be an outright dope, like the barely articulate Brick Tamland of "Anchorman," or a lovable loser, like Michael Scott, his breakthrough role on "The Office." Occasionally, he has been a sheer terror, like John E. du Pont, the murderous scion he played in "Foxcatcher." They are characters that reveal almost nothing about the actor.
So the choices Carell made when he was helping to design his lead character in "Space Force," his new Netflix comedy series, would seem to be telling. Given the opportunity to build a role from the ground up, he cast himself as Gen. Mark Naird, a tightly wound but highly capable military leader charged with creating a new branch of the U.S. armed forces.
Carell created "Space Force" with Greg Daniels, the showrunner of "The Office," and it features Carell in his first ongoing TV comedy role since he left that NBC series in 2011.
But it might not be the show viewers expect. It's not a mockumentary and it's not really a political satire. Carell, whose father fought in World War II, wants the show to have respect for the military and to find its humor in the competing demands of life and work.
But "We didn't want to make the space version of 'The Office,' " Carell said, "which is funny, because as soon as it was announced, that's what everybody started calling it."
Almost a decade after his exit from the Dunder Mifflin Paper Co., Carell, an Oscar nominee for "Foxcatcher" (2014), had been on a run of dramatic and darkly comic roles: a father grappling with a drug-addicted son in "Beautiful Boy"; a disgraced television host on "The Morning Show"; Donald Rumsfeld in the Dick Cheney biopic "Vice."
As he planned his next round of work, Carell, 57, said, "I just wanted to do something funny and silly and lighthearted. A straight-ahead comedy."