The Province

Balancing humour and violence

Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg conspire to ramp up the Preacher’s gore factor

- Victoria Ahearn

Gore abounds in the second season of the Seth Rogen and Evan Goldberg series Preacher, debuting Sunday on AMC, as Dominic Cooper’s church-leader character searches for God. Bodies are shot up, limbs and intestines are strewn about, and a tongue is ripped out of a man’s mouth.

It’s standard stuff for the dark comedy, which is based on the ’90s comic book franchise by writer Garth Ennis and artist Steve Dillon.

But it’s not the type of content that would make the cut under Sony Pictures’ recently announced Clean Version film initiative, which Rogen criticized on Twitter.

That plan involves Sony making sanitized, family-friendly versions of R and PG-13 rated movies available for home viewing.

“I only know what I’ve read in the news and stuff and it seems as though they’ve now taken a position that they’re going to get the permission of their filmmakers before doing that, which I think is at least a step in the right direction,” Rogen said.

“I think to force any director to do it ... is wrong. If some of the directors are OK with it, then that’s fantastic and power to them and I have no issue with that. But the idea that they seemed (initially), to be doing it without the filmmakers themselves either having permission or oversight over the process is what seems potentiall­y scary to me.”

This season of Preacher takes on more of the shape of the source material than the first season.

Cooper’s character, a small-town Texas preacher with a criminal past and unusual powers, hits the road to find God. Joining him is Tulip O’Hare, his tough ex-girlfriend played by Oscar-nominated Ruth Negga, and 119-year-old Irish vampire Cassidy, played by Joseph Gilgun. As they are hunted down by a vicious cowboy killer from hell, they wind up in New Orleans.

The first episode of season 2 is dedicated to Dillon, who died last October.

Rogen and Goldberg, who are longtime collaborat­ors and fans of the comic, directed and developed it for TV along with Breaking Bad producer Sam Catlin.

The Superbad writers strayed somewhat from the original source material for season 1, with the comic creators’ approval, to establish the characters as well as the emotional stakes and the abstract parts of the story.

They had faith that as long as they were doing things they wanted to see from the comic, the fans would agree.

The show strikes a tricky balance of incorporat­ing comedy into violent scenes and twisted scenarios. “The idea of extreme violence that also is funny has just always been something that me and Evan have been very big fans of,” said Rogen.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? AMC Networks president and general manager Charlie Collier, left, showrunner Sam Catlin, producer Seth Rogen, producer Evan Goldberg and AMC Networks CEO Josh Sapan attend AMC’s Preacher season 2 première in Los Angeles.
GETTY IMAGES AMC Networks president and general manager Charlie Collier, left, showrunner Sam Catlin, producer Seth Rogen, producer Evan Goldberg and AMC Networks CEO Josh Sapan attend AMC’s Preacher season 2 première in Los Angeles.

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