Primeval has always lurked around the edges receiving
nowhere near as much respect as many other well known fantasy shows yet if you
talk to anyone who watched it they actually quite enjoyed it. Perhaps the word
`quite` is the clue here. Somehow the programme never managed to be
outstanding. Its flaw was built in from the start- dinosaurs emerge from
anomalies and then they have to somehow have to be sent back through them. This
led to some repetition though to their credit the writers did their best to introduce
human drama in which to frame the monster chasing characters. Set up ostensibly
as a family show the amount of gore or horror they could get away with was also
limited. The first three seasons were originally reviewed in the fanzine
version of This Way Up between 2007-9. Seasons 4 and 5 are already reviewed on
this blog so it’s time to complete the set starting with this review first
published in 2007 and we’ll also be reviewing the Canadian iteration for the
first time.
There are
anomalies appearing out of nowhere and through them lumber ancient beasts- in
this case the return of fantasy telly to our screens. Telefantasy was the
Cinderella of tv, kept in the kitchen doing the mopping all the way through the
1990s. Thankfully, that all changed one amazing March evening in 2005 when ten
million of us urged a 19 year old shopgirl to go on the trip of a lifetime
reinvigorating a moribund genre in 45 minutes. Now we have the first really
serious contender to rival the returned resurgent Doctor Who.
You couldn’t
accuse ITV of underselling this series. The first trailer I saw for Primeval was actually last autumn
sometime in the cinema, no less. An atmospheric affair involving a child
terrorised by an unseen monster it certainly gave the impression that the
channel had uncorked something memorable, a feeling reinforced by the trailers
that seemed to be on continuously in the few weeks prior to transmission. Each
of the principal cast were seen sprinting through what looked like docklands
while a voiceover told you something about them. Oddly it did not say “she used
to be in S Club 7” when it came to Hannah’s bit. Advertisers of no less a
reputation than Saatchi were also hired to create an off-air campaign,
encompassing outdoor and press ads. The buzz slogan was “Time for Adventure”
and the feel was that the programme would be exciting and cool, a notion
reinforced by the use of a Muse track for the background. Wary (and eventually
plain weary) of the comparison, the creators of Primeval nonetheless hoped to generate the sort of buzz that had
gone a long way towards making the revived Doctor
Who such an instant hit two years earlier. Only of course there were
differences; Who was a globally known
franchise with a rich and proven history whereas Primeval was something entirely new. Well, to some extent. Nevertheless
you have to admire the confidence of a promo campaign that didn’t show us a
dinosaur of any kind till a few days before the first episode.
It was back in
the early 1990s that we first experienced the thrill of seeing dinosaurs looking
like real animals thanks to ILM’s groundbreaking work in the film Jurassic Park. Up till then generation
after generation of kids simply had to make do with illustrations,
reconstructed museum models, animation or, if you were unlucky enough to have
seen the Doctor Who story `Invasion
of the Dinosaurs`, purple glove puppets. Yet when we saw dinosaurs moving and
interacting with each other and their environment the effect was jaw dropping.
Over time though, they have gradually become something we’re used to seeing; rather
like the first computers which were treated with reverence and caution, real
looking dinosaurs have become as ubiquitous as spoons, shoes and coffee. Yet
there’s always been a nagging feeling that however awesome they look nobody has
really created an impressive story to go with them and the promise of Primeval was that it would right that
wrong.
The basic idea
for the series came from Tim Haines and Adrian Hodges who had first worked
together on an adaptation of Arthur Conan Doyle’s The Lost World but it would take seven years before the project
came to fruition during which time the playing field had changed. For more than
a decade both BBC and ITV had shied away from what came to be known as `telefantasy`
; even the rare shows they did attempt in the genre were promoted as if they
were not fantasy at all. This resulted in a series of flops for both channels
which nobody realised at the time was probably due to caution and under
promotion (as if they were embarrassed by them) rather than the quality of the
shows themselves. Hodges’ initial idea was of a man whose wife had disappeared
in mysterious circumstances and he was eager to launch a drama series utilising
the CGI dinosaur effects developed for the ersatz documentary series Walking with Dinosaurs, so he and Haines combined to create a series where
dinosaurs were popping into our world with all the chaos that could create.
The results
have cost over £1million an episode to complete and even then there are some
restrictions; notably a limit of 90 dinosaur shots per episode. Most of the dinosaurs are historically
accurate and based on fossil records and to realise them clay models were
created and then turned into three dimensional animation. “If you were making a
film and you wanted your creature work to look this good, it would probably
take several weeks per shot for the animation alone,” said Matt Fox, the
series’ visual FX producer, “We were aiming to turn around shots in four days
for the animation, half a day for lighting, a day for compositing and then
delivering them to the cutting room. It was an incredibly quick turnaround.”
Not that the series was sold on its special effects alone. “We hit every genre”
said Jamie Payne who directed three of the episodes, “horror, thriller, comedy,
romance and straight drama.” As for those comparisons with a certain Time Lord,
Adrian Hodges admits that series like the revived Doctor Who and also Buffy the
Vampire Slayer did provide impetus, “You can deal with big emotional story
lines as long as you pitch it at the right level so the kids don’t get too
restless” he suggests. David Pemsel, ITV's group marketing director added
before the series started: "'Primeval'
is a bold scheduling step into Saturday night family drama. We believe the
series will have both a wide ranging family appeal as well as becoming cult
viewing for aspirational adults."
The proof of
course came with the first episode, broadcast on February 10th. The
7.45 timeslot suggested that this may not be quite as family orientated a series
as had been trailed yet in some respects it lacked some of the nuances that the
first episode of the revived Doctor Who
had possessed. Indeed, in a review the following day `The Sunday Times`’
AA Gill described it, factually, as a `new
children’s show`. While people often do judge a series on its opener, I can’t
remember one of recent vintage which had turned out to be the best, yet what it
must do is draw people in and there is certainly a strong attempt to do that.
The pace is as frantic as the ads had suggested, except for the odd breather,
and the opening an excellent introduction pitting the contemporary- a
supermarket car park- against the unusual- a big dangerous dinosaur. Cilla
Ware’s direction is assured and stylish (if occasionally obvious) and the
editing whipsmart. No complaints about the dinosaurs either, they look real and
certainly dangerous enough and are utilised well. The attack on the kid’s
bedroom and the encounter in the forest are the sort of things that will keep
younger viewers glued and chattering later.
For anyone
older though, there isn’t a lot to engage as the script seems determined not to
tax us. With the exception of the Connor character, it is hard to believe these
people could ever exist; harder in fact than it is to believe dinosaurs are
skulking about the Forest of Dean. Neither panicky nor especially awestruck,
they seemed to quickly accept that fighting big rampaging dinosaurs is what
they are born to do and that’s that. Not for nothing did Russell T Davies
launch both Doctor Who and Torchwood by having a single outsider
sucked into a bizarre new situation. Had Abby been that outsider and the others
already tooled up and dinosaur ready, saving her from peril then it might have
been a more satisfactory way into the milieu. That way too, we could get to
know them through her whereas we are thrown a bunch of characters at once with
no one to hold our hand. There’s probably one too many characters as well; not
sure why the Stephen character is there and judging from his performance
neither is the actor! I’m not certain Douglas Henshall is the right sort of
actor for the main role either. Someone more unusual perhaps, more crumpled but
determined. Most of the time he looks fed up!
This incredulity
stretches beyond the characters as well. Consider: a very large loud dinosaur
attacks a house on a small estate and not one person even comes round to
complain about the noise! Surely they could have afforded a few screaming
extras? Or a harassed policeman? What humour there was comes from Connor’s
attempts to ingratiate himself with the others who are so po faced they’d fit
right in at Torchwood! Still in terms of momentum and as a vehicle to keep
people watching Primeval makes a solid
enough start and in ratings terms too, 6.7 million is not bad.
Perhaps someone
did travel in time and read the above comments before they’re even published as
episode 2 is loads better addressing some of the opener’s problems, especially
in introducing some more character work. Andrew Lee Potts is proving to be the
breakout star of the show, his delivery of reasonably witty lines and all round
geeky enthusiasm making him interesting. Hannah Spearit too, who has so little
acting experience of course, is a vast improvement this week, Abby is becoming
a more interesting person in her own right. Sadly the same can’t be said of
Douglas Henshall who when faced with danger, emotion or anything else seems to
grit his teeth and frown his way through.
Given his reputation this is a major disappointment and although he’s
supposed to be the main character, he is just not holding our interest enough.
That said, there was a super creepy premise this week with giant spiders and
centipedes and while some message board posters have criticised the show’s CGI,
these spine chillers were rendered impeccably and that sort of scare is exactly
what the show should be providing; again the direction is strong and the lighting
subdued enough for maximum bumps. The bit where the centipede rears up at the
screen and the first discovery of the spiders are certainly pushing to be
labeled classic, if only because they give the creatures an animal abandon that
a lot of shows don’t. We’re never left in any doubt that they are rapacious and
very dangerous and that’s how it should be.
Yet after only
two episodes there is a sense that other elements of the show have not been
thought through properly. The search for Cutters wife is intriguing but that’s
about as much as there is for viewers over the age of ten. The doorway through
which the dinosaurs come and go through (very politely in the case of this
week’s spiders) should be a mystery, a wonder and a constant intrigue but its
already being taken for granted. The script also fumbles the
explorer/government interface, a favourite aspect of this sort of programme and
unless they bring in another layer to this then we’ll end up with the same
conversation every week.
The third
episode amplified these latter weaknesses; Ben Miller’s admittedly well played
Lester seems to change his mind on a whim suggesting perhaps a government
conspiracy of some kind – or even government complicity- but what he says never
supports such depth. He is simply written as a pompous government nuisance
spoiling the fun and trying not to panic the public, a character type we have
seen a zillion times. Given that Cutter’s team seem at best accepting of the
dangers and deaths the dinosaurs are bringing, you start to side with him yet
you don’t understand his motivation. As for Cutter’s team; while they keep
coming up with some great ideas as to why the anomalies exist, their banal
personal conversations make you wince at times; characterised by Cutter’s
meeting with his long lost wife after he passes through the anomaly and Abby’s
infatuation with Stephen plot-line. After trumpeting the way the series would
cross all genres, you get the feeling they’d have been better keeping the narrative
rather more confined. Once again, it’s left to Andrew Lee Potts as the likeable
and crucially very human Connor and especially Lucy Brown who plays Claudia’s
role so perfectly to add character substance. Claudia’s clear feelings for
Cutter and how these conflict with her role and his apparent ignorance of her
feelings – this is the big relationship story of the show and she conveys this
so well.
Monster wise,
we get the Mosasaur, which provides another great image when it leaps up and
swallows the diver whole but which later seems remarkably easy to beat off with
an oar and at the end is positively playful with Cutter when it should just
swallow him whole.
Connor’s
conspiracy theory obsessed student mates Tom and Duncan become the centrepeice
for the fourth episode which does what Primeval
threatened to do from the start and tells a story that is both emotionally
involving and terrifically exciting. A lively and often witty script from Bev
Doyle and Richard Kuri combines with Jamie Payne’s assured direction to provide
a story that manages to make us feel something for the characters who have
hitherto been running around doing things but never really emoting anything.
The biggest surprise of all is how well Helen Cutter’s brief return to the
present day is handled; moody shots of her refusing to answer questions and
then her trick to get back is so unexpected that the viewer is wrong footed for
what it really the first time in the show. Paralleled with that is Tom and
Duncan’s scheme which goes disastrously wrong resulting in the most surprising
denouement that marks Primeval’s
first real emotional moment, played well by all. Yet the episode also contains
some of the broadest humour in the show to this point; especially the arrival
of the dodos after Helen’s dire warning of sabre toothed tigers! The dodos are
of course delightfully rendered and this lighter aspect- mirrored by the
exchanges between the team especially Connor (Andrew Lee Potts remains the
show’s most entertaining asset) and Stephen suggest a thawing of the series
hitherto sombre house style. There are strong performances all round,
particularly Juliet Aubrey who glowers her way through her questioning adding
to the mystery of the overall plot, Ben Miller who’s sardonic portrayal of
Lester gets better and better and Jake Curran who- along with the script- helps
turn Tom into a three dimensional character with whom we have enormous sympathy
by the time matters reach their course
It’s a shame
the first three episodes lack the bite, thought and all round enjoyability of
this one but it is the first where the viewer would think `I really want to
find out what happens next week` and when you’ve only got six weeks to show
your strengths, every episode needs to be that good. Confirmation of a second
series came the day before this episode was screened a tremendous boost for the
show’s makers. The improvement was maintained in episode 5 which brought us
pternadons on a golf course
An out and out
thriller borrowing liberally – but successfully- from The Birds, the action sequences are very well staged with photo
realistic flying dinosaurs, helped by some excellent sound work flocking about
ripping people to shreds. Director Jamie Payne is really in his element here
using lots of reactions shots and noises to convey the terror when Cutter and
Claudia get trapped in the club house. Chris Lan’s script successfully exploits
all the potential and often does so in broad daylight; particularly the scene
where the marauders starts smashing through the windows and later when they
flood through the chimney. The golf course scenes are equally well done; there’s
a brilliant shot of Connor running towards the camera as the bird swoops behind
him. Yet this tense action and blistering pace (the episode travels at twice
the speed the opening two did) don’t get in the way of the characters. True,
some of the dialogue remains a little uneasy and still sounds like dialogue but
when good old Douglas H finally manages to come alive in this episode and we
see his passion and anger, it’s a sign of the potential the series does have.
Match that, too, with Helen Cutter’s sudden appearance to give them a hand and
the series is starting to ask questions you want the answers to. Even the
potentially filler material with Connor and Abby chasing Rex the friendly dino
around in the woods sets up a classic horror moment when they suddenly find
themselves face to face with a treefull of hungry things.
While lacking
something of the verve of the previous two episodes, the season closer
certainly pulled some surprises out of the bag, not least a double cliffhanger
at the end that must rank as one of the more head scratching of recent vintage.
You can picture message boards and pub discussions working out the implications
and that’s a good thing. Having improved in most areas as it’s gone along, the
series has hitherto lacked any content that went more than surface deep but
here it is layered on all at once with a monster from the future creating a
time paradox. Relatively easy to think up, but difficult to make watertight,
the revelation of a seemingly Claudia Brown free modern day (and by implication
other things could be different too) seems great provided they don’t fluff it.
It’s a tricky thing to pull off those last moments with a location that didn’t
lend itself to dramatic revelation but is given extra edge by the fact that
something big and dangerous is clearly breaking through the anomaly behind
Cutter. It works well both as a welcome extension of the series’ hitherto
restricted range and a way of getting us all to tune in ten months (ten
months!!) hence. It also makes some sense of Claudia’s weird visions of a sabre
toothed tiger that had lent the earlier part of the episode a dreamlike
quality. All of a sudden the show seems to be working on multiple levels and
providing more for the older audience members.
The build up
continues the lively dialogue, Helen Cutter’s untrustworthy demeanour (I
wouldn’t trust Juliet Aubrey now if I saw her in Sainsburys) and a great
prehistoric revelation. The future- bat-thing is very good albeit too fast or
quite slow depending on the needs of the scene but in terms of providing a
finale monster, a great draw. The sequence in the woods, with whizzy cameras is
particularly effective, though the faffing about at the zoo maybe less so. They
do seem to be struggling to find enough for all the cast to do which
considering there are only six episodes shouldn’t be the case. Abby suffered from
this later on as much as Stephen did in the first three episodes, something the
writers will hopefully attend to.
After all the
hype and expectation and initial disappointment, Primeval settles into something that makes you want to come back
for more, gradually unveiling it’s plot and moving away from the early formula
it seemed to be set in. There are still issues to be addressed if it’s ever to
be viewed as a `classic` of our times – and it certainly has that potential-
most of which revolve around the cast and/or characters. The other thing is
that while the first series would certainly stand up to further viewings- and
some of the action and direction has been of the highest quality- there is
something lacking in the scripts that means the show isn’t really about
anything yet. Only the last episode really made an effort to stretch and
intrigue us, even if was a time paradox rather than something of a more
contemporary line. The potential is there and that wouldn’t mean sidelining the
monsters as another Saturday teatime show has amply shown.
It’s good that Primeval is here, better that it’s won a
second series and what the team needs to do is forget about comparisons, focus
on what worked best in this season and go with that because it really does have
the potential to become a great Saturday night show in it’s own right.
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