'Walking Dead' is huge. So here come 'Preacher' and 'Outcast'
Given the tremendous success of "The Walking Dead," networks are eager to follow in its footsteps.
Enter two macabre new series: AMC's "Preacher," which is slightly
incomprehensible, but intriguing; and "Outcast," a Cinemax show that
comes across as a warmed-over version of "The Exorcist." (Fox,
incidentally, has ordered a series directly based on "The Exorcist" for
fall.)
Both shows are derived from
comic books. And thanks to the comic's cultish devotion, anticipation
has run high for "Preacher." The show represents a big bet for AMC. For
those expecting something scabrous and different, it certainly doesn't
fit many of the little boxes that development executives like to check
off.
Dominic Cooper (whose credits, perhaps appropriately,
include "Abraham Lincoln: Vampire Hunter") stars as the title character,
a conflicted small-town preacher with a violent past, who becomes
infused with a powerful spirit.
He spends time hanging out with
his mercurial ex-girlfriend (Ruth Negga) and an ill-tempered
119-year-old Irish vampire (Joseph Gilgun), who sucks down booze as well
as blood.
Produced by Seth Rogen, among others, "Preacher"
kicks off with a 90-minute premiere and takes its sweet time getting to
anything approaching the point. The story crawls along, at times
confoundingly so.
Indeed, after four episodes there are still far more questions than
answers, starting with why two gun-toting angels are after the preacher
-- or more accurately, after whatever's inside him.
The pacing
parallels "Better Call Saul," another AMC series awash in desolate
Southwestern vistas (both are shot in Albuquerque). It's just that here,
those hypnotic interludes are periodically interrupted by crazy bursts
of violence and gore.
Fans of the comics, which began in the
mid-'90s, will probably be happy just seeing this on screen, after
several failed attempts. The uninitiated's enjoyment will likely hinge
on buying the quirky atmosphere. The casting is an asset, with Gilgun
and Negga sinking their teeth, pardon the expression, into showy roles.
If "Preacher" risks testing one's patience, "Outcast" pretty quickly
exhausts it. The story focuses on the emotionally wounded Kyle Barnes
(Patrick Fugit), who has spent his whole life wrestling with fallout
from demonic possession of those around him.
Understandably
sullen and untrusting, Barnes is recruited by a fire-and-brimstone
minister, Rev. Anderson (Philip Glenister), who has made exorcising evil
spirits his life's mission. The number of cases in the area hints at a
larger mystery, albeit one that's disgorged slowly.
While
"Preacher" employs an absurdist view, wringing dark comedy from its
over-the-top tone, "Outcast" is spooky but also grim and painfully
earnest.
"The battle is coming," Kyle is told. But through
three episodes, that mostly adds up to a lot of minor (if messy)
skirmishes, including the possession of a child in the premiere, written
by "Walking Dead" creator Robert Kirkman.
Perhaps foremost,
these series offer a reminder that transferring such material from
illustrated pages to TV is a delicate process. While "Walking Dead"
mastered that feat, and FX's "The Strain" has done reasonably well,
plenty of others (see "Constantine") haven't. Even a direct spinoff,
"Fear the Walking Dead," has been disappointing.
Still, any major TV hit usually creates a zombie-like horde
lumbering after it, especially in a genre known to attract hard-to-reach
young men.
Of the two, "Preacher" is at least off-kilter
enough to be interesting. Still, if this is the best the summer's new
cable programs have to offer, heaven help us.
"Preacher" premieres May 22 on AMC. "Outcast" premieres June 3 on Cinemax.
'Walking Dead' is huge. So here come 'Preacher' and 'Outcast'
Reviewed by Admin
on
07:51:00
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