The Oz books penned by L Frank Baum have proved to be inspiring fodder for a number of versions and adaptations across various media. As the best known ones are The Wizard of Oz film and the musical Wicked, the tales have become synonymous with songs. A more ambitious attempt to relocate this world to that of drama was made with Emerald City. First developed by writers Matthew Arnold and Josh Freidman for NBC the concept was to extrapolate familiar characters and scenarios from the books to give them a futuristic, edgier twist. They also wanted to make a version grounding some of the more fanciful concepts in a more realistic though still unusual context as well as bringing characters who featured in all of the original fourteen books together to exist at the same time.
The show had endured an
awkward beginning when creative differences between Freidman and NBC led to the
project being canned in 2014 before a moment had been filmed. The main source
of disagreement was NBC wanting the show solely to revolve around Dorothy
whereas Freidman had envisaged an ensemble cast to each have fully developed
storylines. In 2015 the studio relented and gave the green light. However there
was a new showrunner – David Shulner -replacing Freidman. Perhaps one reason
for NBC’s turnaround was the phenomenal success at the time of Game of
Thrones with it’s extensive regular cast though that would prove a mixed
blessing in that any show seeming remotely like it would be unfairly compared
to Jon Snow and co. Speaking to Empire magazine when the series was launched,
David Shulner was generous to credit both Arnold and Freidman for their
development work on the series. He suggested that Emerald City was “an adult show but we’re not a dark show”. He
also focussed on how much came from the books themselves including a trans
character which in tv dramas at that time was unusual. The series hoped to add
a new spin on the legend as many people were only aware of the story of the Wizard
of Oz film.
Ten episodes of Emerald
City were made and the series was shown in early 2017. Unfortunately, it
was cancelled in May leaving some storylines unresolved albeit with an ending
that provided some closure. It is difficult not to interpret this as the studio
feeling their initial reservations about the show were justified. Audience
feedback at the time features comments about the show being too dark and
difficult to follow. Critics picked up on what they saw as weak dialogue and
that they felt there was no humour to balance the grimness. Some claimed the
show had gone out of its way to look like Game of Thrones which it
doesn’t especially and besides it’s not as if Game Of Thrones looks
unlike anything else. There is a `look` about fantasy that stretches right back
to those elaborate book covers of long ago.
In the end Emerald
City was too expensive to justify continuing after such a lukewarm
reception. That does not mean though that it contains little of worth. Eight
years on a viewing reveals a show with a high standard both in front and behind
the camera. It does have grim moments – and for sure the occasional confusing
ones- and not the best dialogue in the world but at the end of the season I was
ready to see more of this version of Oz. I feel it’s a show that would probably
fare better if made nowadays. Especially rewarding is the way that each of the
totems of the well known story are re-imagined in clever ways so there is no
actual lion rather a warrior who has committed a terrible crime when wearing a
leonine mask and cowers from it. There isn’t a scarecrow but instead a man who
has been tied to a cross for crimes he does not recall. In place of a man made
of tin there’s someone who has smashed body parts replaced by metal. Each of
the characters also struggle with issues of identity and a number of them change
names during the season.
One unusual aspect of
the series is that all ten episodes are directed by the same person- Tarsem
Singh. Traditionally a series like this would be divided between at least two
and possibly four directors sometimes shooting in different locations simultaneously
so that production does not over run. Singh
pitched that he wanted to undertake this marathon and in exchange “I’ll make
something you will not have seen before.” “It’s probably the easiest thing I’ve
done,” he told Collider in 2017, “They did such a brilliant job in wiring it”.
He had form in this genre having previously helmed the film Mirror Mirror
which was a reinvented version of the Snow White fairytale. He suggested that
his approach was bound to be a different because “you’ve got an Indian guy
telling a quintessentially white tale to a Western audience.” He revealed he
had not actually watched The Wizard of Oz till three years earlier. “What
I wanted to do was the complete opposite and have it be completely grounded,
like a real place,” Locations utilised for his vision included a national park
in Croatia, fifteenth century castles in Hungary, and the Park Güell in
Barcelona where filming had never been attempted before due its
inaccessibility.
Emerald City remains the only tv
the director has undertaken to date. His other work includes films such as, The
Fall, Self/Less and Dear Jessi and in his early career a
number of well-known music videos including REM’s `Losing My Religion` and En
Vogue’s `Hold On` plus a large number of adverts which he has continued to
direct right up till the present day.
Definitely some of this sensibility is evident in the bold colours
amidst rugged landscape ethos of some of the series’ best moments. It was also the director that persuaded
Vincent D’Onofrio to become involved as he had starred in Singh’s 2000 movie The
Cell. The actor also worked on his character with the writers to expand on
the psychological aspects. “The behind-the-curtain thing is a much
bigger metaphor for his life and his own psychology,” he said, “Then it became
how far will he go to keep up the masquerade?” The rest of the cast included Adria
Arjona as Dorothy, Oliver Jackson- Coehn as Lucas, Ana Ularu as West, Gerran
Howell as Jack, Jordan Loughran as Tip and Mido Hamada as Eamon.
Episode 1 The Beast
Forever
A nurse called Dorothy
is caught up in a tornado while visiting her mother in a remote location.
Taking shelter in a police car she is whisked away with the vehicles into the
whirlwind and ends up deposited in a snowy locale. After finding the body of a woman
she seemingly ran over during the storm, she is taken by tribesmen who declare
that she killed the great witch. Her arrival may also be a portent that a beast
of some kind could be about to be released.
Banished from this land to warmer climes she is advised to go to Oz via a
yellow road; the colour is caused by poppy seeds by the way which might explain
a lot! Along the way she meets a man tied to a cross who has also been tarred
and feathered and has with no memory of who he is. Soon after she helps him
both are caught by that woman we saw earlier, the East Witch who is alive and
well and very dangerous until Dorothy tricks her into shooting herself in the
head.
As that brief synopsis
shows this is not a series that pulls any punches. There is blood, people
writhing in a mud filled prison and even East’s demise is displayed in graphic
slow motion. Conversely it looks terrific, the landscapes and the staging giving
maximum effect none more so than East whose flowing red accoutrements flutter
in the wind behind her against the sunrise as if she’s about to launch into a
song, director Tarsem Singh’s music video background coming into play. Every
shot is impeccably staged while the tornado- which see almost entirely from the
confines of the car- is suitably frightening.
The episode does flash
over to Emerald City itself at intervals which is a bit of a mistake as,
surely, we need to wait to see it whenever Dorothy does. All the talk about
similarities with Game of Thrones, there is instead a definite Dune
vibe coming off these scenes. I can see why though the series did not
necessarily make the right impact from the start. It speeds through
developments without stopping to pause and allow us to learn more. Dorothy must
react quickly to a ton of developments without much explanation as to what is
happening. It is also curious that even clear references to the wizard of Oz
spar no recognition with Dorothy. To me that would be a way to add some humour
to proceedings; her quips about the well-known story against the serious-minded
attitude of the people she meets who are living a version of that story.
Other references to the
Oz legend are less direct so there’s a rainbow decoration in the window of
Dorothy’s home, the munchkins are a regular sized multi ethnic tribe whose name
for a dog is “toto”. The ruby slippers of legend become blood-soaked boots. The
flying monkeys are metal drones shaped like monkeys though still look eerie.
Emerald City does not look especially emerald coloured though. There’s also a
nod to the wizard not being as he seems when, after delivering a rousing speech
to the people, he goes back inside and we see him unexpectedly take a wig off!
The man Dororthy finds, whom she dubs Lucas, is essentially the scarecrow
reimagined as a traumatised soldier.
All this does look
sumptuous and despite dialogue that could do with a more natural flow the cast
work it well. Florence Kasumba is great as she toys with Dorothy and Lucas;
it’s a shame she perishes in this episode. Vincent D’Onofrio brings his
versatility to a role that could easily be overplayed while Adria Arjona adds
to her sparse dialogue to bring some warmth to her character. Oliver Jackson
Cohen also gives a strong performance as Lucas.
Episode Two – Prison of
the Abject
It was probably this
episode that turned some viewers off the series as it gets to the kernel of
exactly what sort of show this is going to be. Conversely it is the episode
that made me realise how intriguing a narrative Emerald City is. While
seeking a way home Dorothy, looking for help for Lucas, comes across a lady
called Mombi living in in isolation in a place with no name who agrees to help
but only after she sees the sword Lucas carries. Turns out this is a sword
belonging to the Wizard’s guard. Played with furtiveness by Fiona Shaw, Mombi
is hiding a boy called Tip upstairs. It becomes clear that attempts to rescue
him before by his friend Jack have failed. Mombi is all kinds of weird but
raises doubts in Dorothy’s mind as to exactly what Lucas did in the past life
he cannot remember. It ends up in frenzied sequence where after Mombi has tried
to poison Lucas, Dorothy rescues Tip to allow him and Jack to escape before
Lucas kills Mombi.
In a likely clue to
Lucas’ past even when she is dead he won’t stop bashing her over the head.
Understandably Dorothy is traumatised b this and their subsequent walk lacks
the banter of the one that opened the episode. At the end of the episode Tip
appears to turn into a girl, presumably Momb’is medicine was what was
preventing this from happening. Whatever it was we effectively have a Trans
character several years before they started to appear in dramas.
In Oz meanwhile tis the
East’s funeral for which the Wizard has allowed the witches temple to be
unsealed after a long time. There’s much to be enjoyed in the pomp of Glinda’s
arrival as played by serene Joely Richardson. Her polar opposite is sister West
who is a cauldron of emotions and craziness; Ana Ularu really puts her all into
this role. The funeral itself is like some Kate Bush lookalike convention and
as the Wizard comments is “quite the show”.
You could say that
about the episode. Brimming with ideas and laced with moments of shock it is
not always an easy watch and there are moments in the witches’ funeral when you
may find it all absurd yet there is a tension and inventiveness in this episode.
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