Penny
Dreadful,
Season One, is all about the most terrifying monsters ever to challenge
humanity.
But
if you believe that by that description I refer to Dracula, Dorian Gray, or The
Frankenstein Monster, you are mistaken.
Although the Showtime TV series, created by John Logan, involves those
beings, all the series’ real monsters stem directly from human nature, from human
psychology.
For
instance, spiritualist Vanessa Ives (Eva Green) contends with shame over a past
indiscretion and betrayal (“Closer than Sisters”). This shame literally possesses her at points,
or paves the way, perhaps, for her spiritual possession (“Possession.”)
Similarly, Egyptologist
Sir Malcolm Murray (Timothy Dalton) deals continually with his own guilt and
vanity (“Séance”), arising from the death of his son, and the abduction of his
daughter, Mina, by a vampire.
Meanwhile,
young Victor Frankenstein (Harry Treadaway) deals with irresponsibility
regarding his own creation or child (“Resurrection,” “Demimonde.”)
Even Ethan Chandler (Josh Hartnett) -- a gung ho American gunslinger -- grapples, at
least after a fashion, with his own flaws. In this case, the primary foible may be cowardice, since Ethan ran away from his life of
wealth and privilege in America (“Night Work.”)
In
Victorian England of the Pax Britannia -- the unusual but remarkable historical
span that gave us both Jack the Ripper and
the works of Charles Darwin -- these conflicted characters serve as our heroes
while they battle the monsters imagined by Stoker, Shelley, and Wilde.
These
monsters move in and out of human society, occupying its fringes, but Ives, Murray,
Frankenstein and Chandler are grounded or anchored in that society of 1891; as consumed
by their personal foibles as they are by their supernatural quarry.
I
am just now catching up with the final episodes of the first season as I write this
review, though the second season is currently airing on Showtime. But at this
stage, I can state that I admire Penny Dreadful’s dedication to
character, and its central leitmotif of psychological monsters vs. literal
ones.
At
first glance, one might mistakenly believe that this horror-themed series is
some League
of Extraordinary Gentleman-type pastiche of Victorian literary figures
-- a superhero movie, essentially -- when in fact, it is the very opposite. The
monsters may be mythic, but the people all possess feet of clay.
Indeed,
Penny Dreadful's excavation (or perhaps I should write “exhumation”) of the central protagonists,
so flawed and self-destructive, takes narrative precedence over the depiction of
the famous monsters, and it is a fascinating idea. The Frankenstein Monster (Rory Kinnear) and
Dorian Gray (Reeve Carney) represent -- much as they do historically -- “othered” horror figures, derided
outsiders dwelling beyond the concept of normality. In other words, their
physicality or exterior qualities make them “different” and outside of the norm. They are easily pinpointed by others, and derided for their dreaded differences.
But
Murray, Ives, Chandler, and Frankenstein, in contrast, showcase the societal norm
as sick and faulty. They may be
beautiful to gaze upon (quite unlike Caliban, or Proteus…), but they represent
an Establishment and society that is corrupt and decadent to its core,
destroying itself with lust and avarice and ambition.
The
nature of the series’ protagonists creates an unusual kind of suspense or
tension in the individual stories.
In the pitched battles with the undead, for example, whether aboard plague ships or beneath opium dens, one is never quite certain if the “heroes”
will succeed, or even if they will all be fighting on the same side at the same time. They are each so tortured and obsessed with
their own history, we sometimes wonder if they can trust themselves and one
another enough to engage the enemy. Only one character among the protagonists seems dependable, though he remains inscrutable: Sembene (Danny Sapani).
One
episode, “Possession,” deals beautifully with this very concept. Murray, Frankenstein and Chandler attempt a
multi-week cure/exorcism of the possessed Vanessa Ives, and are committed to their cause. But before
those weeks are over, questions of motive and secret agendas are raised.
The result? Trust among the characters is diminished, not enhanced. So a story that begins with the openly
acknowledged need for “trust” ends instead with a retreat to separate, individual corners because of the acute recognition that at least one of the monster fighters may not be acting
out of the purest or most honest motives.
Trust gives way to bitter accusations and frissons.
And
meanwhile, out in the world, the bloody carnage -- possibly a result of the
vampire master, possibly a result of the human Ripper -- spreads.
The
first season of Penny Dreadful consists of just nine episodes, but there are at
least three obvious stand-out segments: the aforementioned “Possession,” “Resurrection,”
and “Closer than Sisters.”
“Possession,”
the calm before the storm of the season finale, promises group unity, and then shatters it,
delivering more personal chaos.
“Resurrection”
is a story faithful in spirit and execution to Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein, recounting
the birth and life of the monster, here called Caliban. Much of the episode’s action occurs at the
Grand Guignol Theater, and involves the Monster finding a place where he calls home, a place where he can find belonging.
And “Closer than Sisters” is an absolutely haunting hour that reveals
Vanessa’s back story. We watch her
childhood and friendship with Mina develop, as well as Vanessa’s eventual betrayal, and
the cost of that betrayal on her soul.
I would be remiss if I didn't point out that Penny Dreadful is also remarkably cast. Timothy Dalton is a commanding, sometimes
heroic, sometimes monstrous, presence. Treadaway is perfect as Victor
Frankenstein: fastidious, “bloodless” and at absolutely the right age to play
Shelley’s protagonist (unlike, say, Kenneth Branagh in the 1994 film).
Hartnett is also strong as the brash American
gunslinger, yet the character and the actor both evidence surprising, buried depths, particularly in Chandler's interaction with an Irish prostitute (Billie Piper) and the seductive Dorian Gray.
But all these characters, to one degree or
another, seem to pivot off of Vanessa Ives, and Eva Green delivers a fearless,
nuanced, sometimes bat-shit crazy set of performances here. I write “fearless” because Green is,
obviously, a beautiful woman, and yet she enthusiastically takes her character to some ugly places,
both physically and emotionally in the first season catalog. She delivers
performances of astonishing rawness in “Séance,” “Closer than Sisters” and “Possession,” in particular. In the wrong hands, "Possession" could come off like a knock-off of The Exorcist (1973), but Green makes the story personal and individual to her character, Ives, in a way that makes it feel simultaneously fresh and terrifying.
I’ve
encountered some folks online who watched Penny Dreadful and dismissed it as
slow or somehow campy, though I believe both of those criticisms are off the
mark.
On the contrary, Penny
Dreadful takes its time to establish the psychological “monsters” inside its monster-hunter
team, and the series doesn’t so much go over-the-top as it does attempt to embody
the inherent contradictions of the Victorian Age.
Like that epoch in history, the series zooms from Reason and Enlightenment ideas (even in terms, actually, of sex) to the
heights of wild Romanticism. Murray is a perfect embodiment of this conflict, himself: a
man of science and reason now countenancing an exotic world of monsters and
irrationality, and not quite knowing where he stands in it, or even, what he
really is. Is he a hero, or a
loathsome, vain monster?
Ives battles
the same surging tides and contradictions. On the surface,
she is a chaste, proper lady. But in “Séance,”
“Closer than Sisters” and “Possession” a repressed side literally bursts forth
from her, longing for expression and release.
I
absolutely love The Walking Dead (2010 - ) and its very contemporary zombie apocalypse, yet I must say that it is a
delight to go back to the classic literary monsters and the conflicts of the
Victorian Era.
There’s a place still in
the genre, today, for Frankenstein, Dracula, and the other characters of that Age; characters that embodied, at its beginning, the inescapable contradictions of
modernity.
Penny Dreadful, a Gothic
entertainment, returns us to that framework, and does so with remarkable style
and complexity.
I’m
looking forward to the second season…
I was really curious about this series. I heard about it because the score for the series got quite a bit of good buzz among film score fans. And I love a good gothic horror score, so I checked it out. The score is a keeper by the way. :)
ReplyDeleteAnyway, the premise sounded like it could really work, or fall on it's face. Your review convinced me to check it out. Besides, Timothy Dalton is pretty much awesome in anything he is in, and Eva Green is really great too. Thanks for the review!
Great show, binge watched Season #1 a month ago. Is there any more needed evidence that television, by far, is developing the superior horror product over the film studios?
ReplyDeleteYou've answered my question quite thoughtfully. Thank you sir. g
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