Otago Daily Times

Bizarre, gory and vaguely biblical

-

WHEN someone informed me, while I was partway through watching the first season of Preacher, that it was based on a comic book series, it somehow suddenly made a lot more sense to me. The show’s heady combinatio­n of bizarre and often morally ambiguous characters, supernatur­al themes and extreme violence gives it a kind of surreal comic book feel, and a preexistin­g cult following of fans would explain how such an outlandish and frankly messedup story might emerge in highbudget television format.

The show stars Dominic Cooper as Jesse Custer, a smalltown preacher with a chequered past, who is possessed by a mysterious entity that gives him the power to compel other humans to do as he instructs, or, as another character puts it, ‘‘some kind of smoky brainhand that makes you do things’’.

The second season, which comes to Lightbox this week, picks up where the first season left off, with Jesse, his beautiful and fierce childhood friend and old flame Tulip O’Hare (Ruth Negga) and best friend Cassidy (Joseph Gilgun), a 100yearold Irish vampire with a partiality to hard drugs, setting off on a mission to find God, albeit in perhaps a more literal sense than such an objective traditiona­lly implies. On their trail with grimly determined murderous purpose is The Saint of Killers (Graham McTavish), a kind of demonic contract killer with supernatur­al abilities of his own.

The first episode opens on an irreverent­ly humorous note, with Cassidy partway through a heated rant about the dark conspiracy behind the practice of infant circumcisi­on, but it isn’t long before the action kicks in, in the form of a highspeed car chase

(did you think noone would ever set a car chase to Come on Eileen?

Wrong!) culminatin­g in a bloody shootout.

Oh yeah, something you need to know about Preacher is that it is really gory. Like, horrendous­ly gory. Bloodsplat­tering explosions, graphic dismemberm­ents, spilling guts — this show doesn’t hold back. The first episode of season two notably depicts a head being crushed by a car wheel. If you can’t handle gore, this show is not for you. The violence is so overthetop, though, that it can’t be taken terribly seriously, and ends up being more absurdly humorous than genuinely horrifying. Less Saw, more Itchy and Scratchy.

Preacher won’t be for everyone, but if you have a strong stomach and like bizarre, actionpack­ed black comedy with vaguely biblical themes, it might be for you. The first double episode of season two is now available to stream on Lightbox and new episodes will be added weekly. And if my cursory Wikipedia investigat­ion of the comic series is anything to go by, there’s plenty more crazy for the show’s producers to mine yet.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand