Preacher 1.01: Pilot
Seth Rogen, Evan Goldberg, and Sam Catlin
Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg
By all accounts, Preacher is a tale involving angels, demons, God, and some rather
explicit and violent events, and one would have to wonder how this source
material could be adapted without major concessions. And of course, with Seth Rogen being
involved, one would have to wonder if it would be a complete atonal disaster. Apparently the solution was to take the
overall conceptual ideas of the source material and apply them with altered
scope, characters, and a new starting point.
Purists are likely to gnash their teeth in disapproval.
Part of the problem for the series is that it’s
almost impossible to explain to anyone who might be interested in it. What is it about? Well, there’s a preacher named Jesse Cutler,
who is trying to atone for a lifetime of sin by following in his father’s
footsteps as the head of a very small church in a very small Texas town. His ex Tulip shows up and underscores all
Jesse’s faults, of which there are many.
Jesse is not having a fun time of it.
Also in the cast? An Irish vampire named Cassidy that likes to
drink a lot, a waitress named Emily, and a teenager with massive facial
deformities that have earned him the moniker Arseface. It’s not entirely clear at this point how
these characters factor into the larger story, because while there’s a lot of
fighting against something vaguely demonic, not a lot of time is spent on
useful exposition. Things happen, but
why they happen is still unclear.
And even better, this episode was an extended
premiere, so it felt like a prologue that went on for far too long. I kept waiting for some measure of
clarification as to the nature of the story and where things were likely to
progress. Not to mention, I was left
wondering how a pilot episode that didn’t actually tell you much about the
series it was meant to spawn was successful in getting said series put to order. I suspect a lot of potential viewers are
going to be turned away by the apparent lack of direction.
While Tulip
and Cassidy are both introduced in ways that tell us what kind of “people” they
are, the episode itself doesn’t tell us a whole lot about what kind of story
they are in and why they are important.
Jesse is reserved to the extreme and constantly looks haunted by his
past, which doesn’t exactly make him the most compelling lead. That he’s given some special power that might
help him find meaning (I think?) is a nice enough hook, but this feels like
something designed for the already-initiated, at best.
What this series does have going for it, besides a solid cast behind these characters, is a quirky commentary on small-town religion and personalities. How much of that factors into the story, as opposed to being “window dressing”, is still entirely unclear. But for now, it may be the one thing that brings a casual viewer back for more.
- Quirky characters populate this remote Texas town
- The producers have certainly pulled together a solid cast
- The pilot doesn’t actually tell you much about what the series is going to be like
- The lead character is reserved and haunted to a degree that may be off-putting
Danger Mouse
6/5/2016 9:23 PM
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