The
opening episode of season 2 certainly wastes no time in establishing a new
tenor for the show. In some senses it seems as if some of the scientific
plausibility has been stripped away in favour of more standard telefantasy
devices so when the ARC was unveiled I was reminded of the revamped seaQuest vehicle and that’s not really a
compliment. There was something very English about the Home Office used for the
first season whereas this new rather unfeasibly large (considering its all supposed to
be top secret) place where hundreds of people seem to work looks very American
(and you have to wonder what exactly this army of employees all do!). When you
reduce any show to simply finding and chasing the result is blandness whatever
the quality of the FX. Thankfully though early impressions (the episode takes
half its running time to settle down) are deceptive, not only is there a lovely
bit of pretend science to enjoy (with the radios) but we see that Primeval has tried to improve the
characterisations.
Much
of the time last year there was little sense of believability about the people.
Harcore sci-fi fans disliked Connor but for me he seemed the only living
breathing character and that was partly because he got the best lines and
courtesy of Andrew Lee Potts – an actor very good at switching from funny to
serious in a second- he came alive. This episode again allows him to shine and
Hannah Spearitt seems to be developing Abby too, no longer a foil for other
people’s lines she does seem more involved. The real surprise though is Doulgas
Henshall who I felt was underwritten in series 1, but here faced
with the changes Cutter encounters he delivers a committed and quite emotional
performance earning his status as leader of the cast.
The
script does however seem to skirt over most of the juicy possibilities of the
changes rather too easily; the potential niggling between Cutter and Stephen
disappears half way through and even Abby’s reaction to having been placed in
danger twice by Connor seems benign bemusement rather than anger. Having tried
a reboot the script seems anxious to return to the way things were. That being
said, this is a very visual action orientated opener and if a little slow to
start, by the time of the chases in the mall and several key scenes of the
raptor attacking we are probably not too fussed about holes. The FX are
excellent combining with some brilliant sound work and director Jamie Payne’s
camera work to create enough edge of the seat moments. The humour was strong;
whether Connor’s quirky quips or Lester’s more droll observations, it really is
an aspect of the show that works. Ben Miller is well suited to this role and
his crawly new sidekick Leek shows early promise as a good foil.
What’s
also pleasing is the writer’s refusal to stand still, with the discovery of a
way of predicting the anomalies the format is being moved on again and that’s
all for the good. There are lots of little issues floating about now with plenty for
the writers to exploit. There’s something rather good too about the way the
general public remains ignorant of both the anomalies and rampaging creatures.
Plus there is
something much more tense about a raptor chasing just you in a shopping centre
than the whole world being invaded.
Part
2 sees a similar scenario this time set in an office block where a strange mist
seaps through an anomaly though this is really so that the erstwhile Claudia,
now called Jenny Lewis, can bed in as the team’s PR gloss person. The scripts a
cocktail that doesn’t always taste right; Jenny seems not to have been briefed
at all about her job, so quite how she got it is a mystery while the giant worm
like things that live in the mist are choosy about when and where to attack.
The possibilities are greater than the results and there is often too little
tension where there should be lots, partly because when it suits the plot, people
seem able to stroll about in the mist unscathed.
However, there are some lovely
character moments in this episode, the Cutter / Jenny scenes are well written
and Connor again gets the best lines. Mad as a hatter Helen is also back
briefly allowing Juliet Aubrey to do her mysterious face that always suggests
she’s up to something. All told, it lacks the energy of part 1. Mind you, they
have upped the humour content this year – the Japanese businessman’s reaction
to witnessing the goings on during a conference call and the way Connor is
suddenly attacked- are great gags.
While
the third episode fails as a whodunit, telegraphing Gillian Kearney’s smilodon
loving zoologist after about ten minutes, as a thriller it works superbly.
Taking cues from 70s disaster films –the bit where Connor thinks he sees a big
cat from his vantage point is straight from Jaws- the tension is kept taut by keeping the sabre
toothed marauder under wraps till halfway through. The encounter between the
animal and Cutter in a pine filled lodge is one of the best the series has yet
done. The tiger looks a tad false outside, but at close quarters is full of
sound and fury and the sequence piles one incident after another pulling you to
the edge of your seat. The sound mix, always a strong point, is top notch in
this episode with lots of growls and snarls shooting out of the speakers.
Elsewhere,
there’s plenty of humour, which seems to have increased this season and a
little intrigue too, courtesy of Connor’s new girlfriend. The fact that she is
seemingly in the employ of Lester’s new oily sidekick Leek (and does Lester
even know?) is an interesting sidebar that looks as if should play out well
later on though of course it fizzles out at the end of the season. Once again
though the episode reinforces Connor’s seemingly pre-eminent position; he gets
the best lines and continues to benefit from a character arc that nobody else
seems to have. Lucy Brown’s ability to crumple from confident to terrified as
soon as faced with a threat makes her an asset too; her flirting with the
public to persuade them to toe the PR line is enjoyable.
Episode
4, set in amongst canals and including a sort of giant walrus / shark thing
from the future again exposes the show’s strengths and weaknesses. Once it gets
going the action is terrific stuff with various team members in danger of
being killed by the monster as it and its children stalk the waterways. Yet the
broader attempts at adding to the characterisation stretch credulity. Take
Connor’s new girlfriend for example; she somehow manages to catch Abby’s pet
dino Rex and put it in the freezer, but you think to yourself- how and why does
she do this? Clearly she is more athletic than she seems and surely such an act
would immediately raise suspicions? Then there’s Stephen and Nick whose
different approaches to sorting out the threat nearly lead to disaster yet the
former seems to hold his point of view for no discernibly credible reason.
There
remains a lack of interaction between most of these people which, this many
episodes in, should not be the case and it spoils attempts to make the show
more sophisticated. Otherwise it remains an enjoyable and sometimes tense
runaround and thank goodness for the sub plot of whatever Leek and his agents
are up to; it is to be hoped that this does turn out to be something good and
it is telling that the appearance of Helen at the end is more intriguing than
the preceding 55 minutes.
This
plot gains more prominence in the fifth episode (can’t they give them melodramatic
names like `Sands of Doom`!) when Leek sends three mercenaries into the latest
anomaly on a mysterious mission (possibly to capture a creature?). However they
end up as food to a group of giant scorpions creatures which does give some
sense that historical accuracy is being slowly pushed aside for adventure and
pseudo science. This could be a double edged sword- on the one hand this season
has had more exciting moments, on the other it has edged a little closer to being
little more than a comic strip. Anyway, also trapped in
the sand covered hellhole is a girl called Taylor whose disappearance is looked into by
Cutter and team. Or, as the ITV continuity announcer insists on calling him, “Cutler”.
The sequences in the desert locale are very well shot with some filters making
it look very hot and exotic though it was probably filmed in this country.
There’s more than a whiff of the cult film Tremors
as the predators `swim` about under the sand and our heroes have to stay on
rocks to avoid being eaten. Inevitably there’s a varying degree of safety
depending on the situation; Cutter and Stephen can trek for ages on the sand
but our mercenary pals are eaten up after just a few steps. And we are led to
believe that a helpful crescent of rocks leads all the way back to the anomaly.
Also, as pointed out by the `Radio Times, Helen seems able to come and go as
she pleases whereas it doesn’t take much for the others to get trapped.
The sub
plot has Connor attempting to come to terms with his feelings for Abby having
blurted out last week that he loves her, admittedly when it looked like she was
about to be eaten alive by a giant walrus which would bring out the romantic in
any of us! This is tenderly played though there isn’t enough room to do it
properly. Our surprise that someone like Connor would dump his girlfriend by
text is assuaged by the fact that she always seems to have it in for Rex and
this week seems to have kidnapped the poor thing. Quite why she seems able to
linger about in the flat when neither Connor or Abby are there remains a
mystery in itself. It’s a pity Naomi Bentley doesn’t have more screen time; the
duplicitous girlfriend who really does fall in love with Connor was what we
were expecting, instead she’s psycho girlfriend who’d rather attack the pet
than do whatever it is she’s supposed to be doing.
This
is a good episode that, like several others this season, could have been a
great one. It’s let down by weak dialogue- though the encounters between Cutter
and Jenny are always good – and a tendancy to paper over inconveniences though the
action remains excitingly done, the FX never less than sharp and the overall
arc plot bubbling up interestingly.
For
understandable enough reasons Primeval
plots rarely strays into the wider public domain and all the anomalies
conveniently appear in remote, out of the way places. In the sixth and best
episode (written by acclaimed Doctor Who
scribe Paul Cornell with a discernable difference to the feel) we have a
mammoth on the motorway. And it’s very angry, so much so that it spends the
first fifteen minute turning cars over and threatening everybody. It’s a
superbly realised set piece, the open air and space not proving any hazard to
the series’ trademark FX skills and there’s a terrific bit where Cutter is
trying to rescue a woman trapped in her car which the Mammoth is hitting rather
hard. And the moment when we see it charging through the rear view mirror is
un-nerving too. The dichotomy of the show’s superb visuals and shakier plotting
is instantly brought home though when you hear Jenny’s succinct public
relations strategy and you think: did none of the motorists take a snap of the
Mammoth and send it to anyone, who would then load it on YouTube? This is
something season 3 is going to have to deal with because there’s only so much
you can cover up in our tabloid orientated 24 hour news society.
Anyway it
turns out that the Mammoth is only the appetizer for more human matters as
Oliver Leek’s plot trickles out and we find Lester, on his own in the Arc being
pursued by the future predator. Notwithstanding the fact that nobody has
thought to ask why a white van has been parked up in the main control room all
day, this is another very well directed scene with lots of lights flickering on
and off and shock camera angles. Plus Lester manages to just about keep his
demeanour even when he’s being clawed at. It does make you realise we know next
to nothing about him. The intrigue is stacked up quite well when it
comes to what Leek is up to and there’s some classic tricking the audience
stuff at the end plus a cliff hanger to make us really look forward to the last
episode of the season which certainly delivers on the expected mind bending
twist that the seems to be the series’ signature sign off.
Unlike
the first season, this year’s finale doesn’t quite manage to be the sum of its
parts. All the ingredients are lined up but each resolved to some extent
unsatisfactorily. Take the whole Helen / Cutter thing; she’s a master
manipulator yet easily duped into believing what he was wittering on about in
while incarcerated. Then there’s her motivation, never properly explained and
dumped when things get tough so she pitches in to help. Or how about Stephen who supposedly gets a
heroic send off but only because he has to close a door from the inside! Was
there no other way to get out and contain the situation? Is this really a
climactic death for a main character? There is therefore a sense of boxes being
ticked here and a feeling of contrivance about the whole thing which might not
have been so bad had the direction been unusually flat at crucial moments.
Good
things about the episode include some ingenious escapology against seemingly
overwhelming odds. The most exciting bits come early on and they are choice,
especially the escape from the dinosaur’s dinner and Cutters unbelievable but
very exciting escape from the army of future predators. Leek’s demise is well
played too, that computer virus we all thought had failed was brought into play
by an ingenious bit of Cutter cleverness. Plus lots of monsters = plenty of
teatime fun!
The
twist- multiple identical mercenaries and lots of hints from Helen about the
future- suggest another reboot next season and with reports it will be ten
episodes long the future for this series – still averaging between 6 -7 million
viewers an episode – does indeed look bright. Primeval has proved it can do thrills and spills and spin a decent
yarn, even throw in the odd curveball but the competition is obvious and
compared to the 2007 season of Doctor Who,
this series has a long way to go before it reaches the point where it is
nudging the button marked `classic`. Lets hope it can reach that high.
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