Josh Hartnett, Harry Treadaway, Eva Green and Timothy Dalton in Penny Dreadful (Photo by Jonathan Hession) |
Named for the Victorian-era pulp novels that captured the
attention of young British men with their vivid tales of true crime and gothic
horror, Showtime's new series Penny Dreadful premieres tonight. The show
is a co-production of Showtime with Britain's Sky Atlantic and will begin airing
for UK audiences on May 20th. The period horror series boasts strong
production values, a talented cast of actors, and some genuine literary
ambition. And also, it need not be said, vampires. Lots and lots of vampires.
With three seasons of FX's American Horror Story under our belt and
the second season of its poorer Netflix cousin Hemlock Grove premiering in a month, I wouldn't have thought
that the television landscape needed another self-described
"psychosexual" horror series. And honestly for this sometimes
weak-stomached viewer, two horror series have sometimes been two too many, with
the current shows erring too much and too often on the side of exploitation for
me to enjoy them regularly. To its credit, Penny
Dreadful – for all its gothic pedigree and explicitness regarding blood
and sex – has succeeded in telling a story which is both creepy and entertaining. Sensationalist without
being lurid, literary without being self-conscious, Penny Dreadful is a blast.
Set in 1891 London (mainly in
the city's East End, because where else would you want to be in late Victorian
England?), Penny Dreadful is created
and written by John Logan, the playwright-turned-screenwriter who has penned
such diverse fare as Rango, Hugo and Gladiator, and who co-wrote Skyfall. (Logan is also slated to write
the next two James Bond films, with Dreadful
executive producer Sam Mendes returning as director for both.) With Penny Dreadful, Logan reaches into the
annals of British gothic fiction and reinvents some its most memorable personages. And alongside figures straight from the pages of Mary
Shelley and Bram Stoker are some wholly original characters.
Timothy Dalton and Eva Green in Penny Dreadful |
Indeed, not to be outdone by the film adaptation of Extraordinary Gentlemen (which boasted
Sean Connery as adventurer Allan Quatermain), Logan casts another former Bond, Timothy
Dalton, for his adventurer Sir Malcolm Murray. Dalton's character is playing
double narrative duty here, since he not only stands in for the
Quartermain role, but because it is his obsessive search for his missing
daughter – Wilhelmina, aka "Mina" Harker (née Murray) of Dracula fame – that brings our
"heroes" together, a team
which includes a young Victor Frankenstein (Harry Treadaway) and (eventually)
an unnervingly beautiful gentleman by the name of Dorian Gray (portrayed by
newcomer Reeve Carney). Still, for all the familiar names, the majority of the
characters we have met so far are creations of Logan himself, even if they are
recognizable genre types: the American gunslinger Ethan Chandler (Josh Hartnett,
Black Hawk Down), the aging explorer
Sir Malcolm, and Vanessa Ives (played by French actress and Bond film alum Eva
Green), the alluring spiritualist with not a little of Sherlock Holmes in her.
Chandler comes on the scene as a performer in a touring
"Buffalo Bill" Cody-style Wild West Show, playing up the Rough Rider shtick and shooting
feathers off the hats of adoring young damsels. His gun prowess gets the
attention of Ives, who draws Chandler into this dark demi-monde where dead things walk – "a half-world between
what we know and fear, a place in the shadows, rarely seen but deeply
felt." Intrigued (mainly by Ives herself) but still sceptical, Chandler is
the audience's stand-in as the full extent of this shadowy world unfolds in the
show's first hour. Hartnett's Chandler, a man of "great violence and
hidden depths", no doubt has his
own mysteries yet to be mined, but his American straight-talk ("Who the fuck are you people?") brings much needed groundedness to the
proceedings.
Josh Hartnett and Eva Green in Penny Dreadful |
Penny Dreadful is
dark, not only thematically but visually, often set in a world of literal and
not merely figurative shadows. But the
darkness, for all of its gloom, works especially well in light of the show's
inevitable gore, tempering it and making it more often suggestive than
exploitive. The literal bloodbath that our heroes stumble upon – a vampire
nest with piles and piles of
bloodied, disassembled corpses – which could have tipped the series into
gross-out self-parody, instead has the nuanced look of a page from a graphic
novel rather than a contemporary horror film.
Penny Dreadful may be having fun with its monster mash-up
conceit, and even if some of the
dialogue may tend towards melodramatic speechifying (with the idealistic young
Dr. Frankenstein being a repeat offender), it is anything but camp in its
delivery. There's a grotesqueness to Dreadful's
monsters – its vampires are more beasts than men, a welcome corrective after a
decade of Twilight's sparkling
bloody-sucking heartthrobs – and a humanity to its characters that brings just
enough existential reality to faithfully call to its literary origins. Though
it may paint with broad strokes, Penny
Dreadful is still capable of fine
detail – and it all adds up to a right bloody adventure.
Penny Dreadful airs
on Sundays at 10pm on Showtime in the US and The Movie Network in Canada. It will premiere on Sky for UK audiences on May
20th.
– Mark Clamen is a writer, critic, film programmer and lifelong television enthusiast. He lives in Toronto, where he often lectures on television, film, and popular culture.
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