You know what, I already did one but I’m gonna do another one: Lovecraft Country.
First episode did just about everything you’d want out of a Jim Crow-era supernatural horror road trip mystery. Felt like they really had a handle on the whole “fear of the unknown and incomprehensible” vibe that you don’t see done well very often, the cast had great chemistry, and the whole theme of “the real incomprehensible eldritch abomination threatening human sanity is racism” was executed flawlessly. They walked a very fine tightrope between homage and condemnation of Lovecraft’s whole… deal and nailed it in one.
And then the main mystery is resolved by the second episode and the whole thing devolves into a very uneven anthology of psychic snakes and angry ghosts and like, Nazi wizards worshipping what I think was just the regular devil and overall very known and comprehensible horrors that didn’t really hold my attention for long enough to see if they even tried to tie them all together.
Man, all I wanted was a long-form cosmic horror story wrapped in a character-driven prestige TV period drama with some biting social commentary that doesn’t suck. They don’t make a lot of those!
You know what, I already did one but I’m gonna do another one: Lovecraft Country.
First episode did just about everything you’d want out of a Jim Crow-era supernatural horror road trip mystery. Felt like they really had a handle on the whole “fear of the unknown and incomprehensible” vibe that you don’t see done well very often, the cast had great chemistry, and the whole theme of “the real incomprehensible eldritch abomination threatening human sanity is racism” was executed flawlessly. They walked a very fine tightrope between homage and condemnation of Lovecraft’s whole… deal and nailed it in one.
And then the main mystery is resolved by the second episode and the whole thing devolves into a very uneven anthology of psychic snakes and angry ghosts and like, Nazi wizards worshipping what I think was just the regular devil and overall very known and comprehensible horrors that didn’t really hold my attention for long enough to see if they even tried to tie them all together.
Man, all I wanted was a long-form cosmic horror story wrapped in a character-driven prestige TV period drama with some biting social commentary that doesn’t suck. They don’t make a lot of those!
You might like Watchmen. The TV show on HBO not the movie. It’s actually a sequel to the original run of comics and original ending.