Two weeks ago, Misfits began its much anticipated second season. When the show premiered last fall in the UK on Channel 4, it was nothing short of a phenomenon. This past June Misfits surprised everyone, including the show’s young stars, when it won the BAFTA for Best Drama, beating out BBC favourites Spooks (aka MI-5 in North America), Being Human, and Jimmy McGovern’s exquisitely powerful The Street. Part teen drama, part science fiction, part inner-city portrait, the premise of the show is deceptively familiar: five young delinquents suddenly find themselves with superpowers. We’ve all seen comparable stories before, be it on Smallville, Heroes, The X-Men, or more recently, this season’s No Ordinary Family on ABC. And while on paper Misfits might bear a passing resemblance to these more conventional offerings it has very little in common with any of them. The series is intelligent, darkly comic, intensely suspenseful, and always extraordinarily fun. Think of it as Heroes meets The Breakfast Club, with a large dash of Trainspotting.
Set against a grey, urban landscape peppered with alienated youth, decaying infrastructure, and economic despair, Misfits is, ironically, more grounded in reality than many other less fantastical shows. The show’s writing is sharp and hilarious, invariably profane, and refreshingly unadorned. (Series creator Howard Overman is credited with penning every one of the first season’s 6 episodes and it looks as if the same will be true for the current season.) The five young actors—largely unknown before they were cast in the show—don’t have the cheek-bones, jarring athletic builds, and model good looks that populate what passes for teen dramas on American television, but they are consistently superb in their roles. The charisma of Robert Sheehan, the young Irish actor who plays Nathan on the series, could carry the show on its own, but each of our ‘heroes’ is a well-drawn and profoundly human character.
Iwan Rheon as Simon |
Robert Sheehan as Nathan |
Antonia Thomas and Nathan Stewart-Jarrett |
With most of the action taking place in or near one community centre, the setting is impressively restrained. The Southeast London locale, a backdrop of council apartments and grey skies, is part of why the show remains consistently grounded in reality, despite the unmistakable allure of its more fantastical elements. (A recurring view from outside the centre might be familiar to fans of A Clockwork Orange, which was also filmed in this area.) This restraint fully complements the personal nature of the character-centred storylines, and keeps our focus on our protagonists and not the wider world, which we only get access to by way of their (non)relation to it. There are no master villains plotting our protagonists’ destruction and no epic multi-episode arcs: it isn’t the world which is at stake, but who these characters will be.
At the core of the show’s appeal are a handful of true-to-life teenagers: each finding their own way through a world that wants nothing to do with them except to keep them from causing trouble. Though the show’s moral centre is constantly shifting—for example, our gang of five has a nasty habit of (accidently) killing their probation workers—Misfits isn’t a celebration of delinquency so much as its humanization. Our main characters might not yet really know who or what they are, but they (and all like them) are judged, boxed in, and controlled on a daily basis by people who don’t give them a second look, except perhaps to cross the street to avoid them. In general terms, this can be boiled down to a fairly straightforward moral: if you judge these kids simply on their appearance, you will invariably miss the power and potential they each possess.
Lauren Socha as Kelly |
With its frank sexuality, extreme language, and often violent situations, the show is definitely not for children. Though its characters are in their teens, Misfits confidently walks over the lines that our popular media tends to draw for ‘teen entertainment.’ Nonetheless, the adolescent angst and finely drawn portraits of disaffection and inner suffering that the series draws upon will no doubt hit home for a young audience. Still, you didn’t hear it from me.
The second season of Misfits began on Channel 4 on November 11, with new episodes airing weekly through the end of December. The first season Misfits aired in its entirety in Canada on Showcase this past spring. To date, the show hasn’t aired in the U.S., however the complete first season is available on DVD (in PAL format) at Amazon.com.
-- Mark Clamen is a lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
Technically, Smallville isn't even in Smallville anymore, it's in Metropolis. Anyways, nice review. Still don't think I'll be digging into Misfits anytime soon.
ReplyDeleteSo I dug into Misfits and love it.
ReplyDeleteOk so im in canada and its not showing me the show! did it even get released here? i watch doctor who and bieng human, but misfits never got aired!
ReplyDeleteThe first season of Misfits aired on Showcase in Canada last spring (premiering on March 29, 2010). Hopefully they will be airing the second season very soon, although it hasn't yet re-appeared on its schedule.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.showcase.ca/ontv/titledetails.aspx?Root_Title_Id=255681