I had seen the promos for Fox’s PRODIGAL SON back in 2019
and my eyes slid off it. “What if Hannibal Lector had a son and they solved
mysteries together?” Wasn’t interested.
A few weeks ago, with my wife’s urging, we gave it a try. I
am converted.
The Premise
The story focuses on Malcolm Bright (played by Tom Payne), a
former FBI profiler, who now works with a small team at the NYPD. The police
squad is led by Lt. Gil Arroyo (perennial favorite Lou Diamond Phillips) with
Detectives Dani Powell (Aurora Perrineau) and JT Tarmel (Frank Harts) as part
of the team. Keiko Agena plays Dr. Edrisa Tanaka, the medical examiner.
It is Malcolm’s father who is the serial killer known as The
Surgeon, and for good reason: he is renowned surgeon Dr. Martin Whitly. Rouding
out the main cast is Malcolm’s mother, Jessica (Bellamy Young) and his sister,
Ainsley (Halston Sage).
The pilot centers on a copycat killer who is using The
Surgeon’s MO, so Malcolm is brought in. As a kid, Malcolm was the one who exposed
his father, leading to his arrest and imprisonment. Lt. Arroyo was there and
has taken a fatherly interest in Malcolm ever since.
The Central Question
This is your typical killer-of-the-week type of show, but it
is the characters who help lift this show above the mundane. Despite my initial
reticence, you might have thought the premise alone would have hooked me, but I’m
not a huge fan of serial killer stories. Still the dynamics of Malcolm’s
character make it pretty interesting. With a title like PRODIGAL SON and
Malcolm’s own mental issues, there’s a strong chord throughout the show asking
the simple question: Is Malcolm like his father? Could the younger Whitly
succumb just like his father?
The “Is he or is he not a killer?” is a nice twist on the
traditional “Will they or won’t they?” question we ask of shows like CASTLE.
Speaking of one of my all-time favorite shows, the pilot is very similar to to CASTLE’s pilot. Shrug.
There is also the question revolving around Malcolm’s
continued flashbacks to one night, when he was a child, and saw a woman in a
chest. Was she a victim? Who was she? And what happened to her?
The Characters
Even if a premise hooks you, it is often the characters who compel
you to stay. Here, despite the guardrails of a network television show, the
characters are pretty darn good. Malcolm’s great and his mind trips are, well,
a trip. His relationships with the various members of his family are dramatic
if not a little too dramatic. When he visits his dad, they’re always very
formal, with the son referring to his dad as “Dr. Whitly.” But it’s really neat
to see the progression of their relationship as the 20-episode first season
goes on.
Speaking of The Surgeon, Michael Sheen is having a blast. He
knows he’s often the comedic relief and he plays it up. It’s a little jarring
at first to see this serial killer be funny and you laugh at his comments, but
Sheen does a fine job. Know what else he’s good at? The sudden shift from funny
to dangerous, sometimes at the blink of an eye. It is in those moments when you
go, “Oh, right, he’s killed twentysomething people.”
Phillips is solid as a rock. He is even-keeled who knows he
has to go by the book, but also realizes “by the book” doesn’t apply to
Malcolm. This is an “eccentric detective with cops” show after all. He really
cares for Malcolm and does his best to keep the young man out of as much
trouble as he can, not always successfully.
The Stories
Like most shows nowadays, there is the crime-of-the-week
ones and the season-long story arc. Both are satisfying but there are bumps
along the road. Highlights include one in which Malcolm wakes to find himself
chained inside a cellar (episode 11), the pilot (for setting everything in
motion and hooking me), the one with a former cop who worked The Surgeon’s case
(episode 10), and the last trio of episodes. I can’t think of a single episode
that was sub-par, and many were quite entertaining.
The Twists
If given the premise and the central questions I listed
above, I’m guessing you’d form your own opinions on what might happen during the
season. Trust me: I had them, too. But creators Chris Fedak and Sam Sklaver know
what you’re thinking and deliver something different. It’s nice to say that
some of the questions are resolved while others just make you anticipate season
2 that much more.
The Verdict
I thoroughly enjoyed season 1 of PRODIGAL SON and would
certainly recommend. I know I’m eagerly waiting for season 2.
No comments:
Post a Comment