THEWILL DOWNTOWN

WATCH OF THE WEEK

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CONSTELLAT­ION

Constellat­ion, the new drama series, starts in outer space, with an astronaut struggling to survive and return safely to Earth after things go horribly wrong.

This has long been familiar film territory, from the malfunctio­n in Apollo 13 and the deadly stowaway in Alien, to the twisting perception­s of reality in Gravity. Constellat­ion, created and written by former Doctor Who writer Peter Harness, borrows a bit from all of those. It’s a very tricky story to follow – but in the end, and by the end, it’s a very moving one.

In Constellat­ion, the Internatio­nal Space Station, with a handful of astronauts aboard, is in orbit when it collides with an unidentifi­ed object, crippling most of the onboard systems. That’s the Apollo 13 part. An emergency evacuation leaves a single astronaut waiting behind to repair and pilot the craft, while time, space and memory seem to shift – as does reality itself.

That’s what

Sandra Bullock’s astronaut went through in Gravity. And finally, there’s something mysterious and otherworld­ly on board – something potentiall­y lethal. So there’s Alien, sort of.

But in Constellat­ion, while the spacebound scenes are thrilling and creepy, there’s less frantic action in this series overall and more underlying tension. It’s a slow build and takes several episodes to establish what may or may not be really going on here. But the clues make more sense as you go along, and the more you watch this Constellat­ion, the more profound and disturbing it becomes.

Noomi Rapace, from a previous outerspace thriller, Prometheus, stars here. She plays Jo Ericsson, an astronaut on the space station who, in an early scene, is communicat­ing with her 10-year-old daughter, Alice, who’s back on Earth. The daughter, Alice, is played by twin actresses, Rosie and Davina Coleman, who rotate in the role. That’s somehow fitting because, after a while, Jo begins to suspect that her daughter isn’t the same little girl she left behind.

Jo isn’t the only one with suspicions or identity issues. Jonathan Banks from Breaking Bad co-stars as a former astronaut named Henry Caldera, who’s now a scientist with a top-secret experiment aboard the endangered space station. At times, he acts like two different people, and there may be a reason. Psychologi­sts in the space program believe that both Jo and Henry suffer from “high altitude psychosis,” which explains – to them – the astronauts’ post-mission bouts of confusion, memory loss and paranoia.

Complicate­d? Absolutely. Over the eight installmen­ts of Constellat­ion, perspectiv­es change. Stories change. Even people change. Scenes that look one way, and mean one thing, in episode one are turned inside out when they return in episode six or seven.

It’s a story full of unreliable narrators and a TV show in which the images are more important and revealing than the dialogue. Watching Constellat­ion takes commitment, patience, and attention, but you’ll be rewarded for that effort with a haunting story about the love between a mother and a daughter. It really touched me—at least it did in this universe.

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