Empire (UK)

PENNY DREADFUL: CITY OF ANGELS

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OUT NOW

SKY ATLANTIC/NOW TV EPISODES VIEWED 4 OF 10

SHOWRUNNER John Logan

CAST Natalie Dormer, Daniel Zovatto, Kerry Bishé

PLOT In 1938, Los Angeles is an angry place, watched over by a furious supernatur­al entity, Magda (Dormer). Tiago Vega (Zovatto) is about to start his first day as the first Chicano detective in the LAPD. He’ll encounter murder, riots, Nazis and more in a city — a world — on the brink of eruption.

THE FIRST ITERATION of Penny Dreadful mixed classic horror characters — Frankenste­in, Dr Jekyll, Dracula — in Victorian London in a saga about the monstrousn­ess of man and assorted psychosexu­al doings. It was handsomely produced, very creepy and a little bit camp. A marvellous combinatio­n. City Of Angels, a tangential­ly connected spin-off, takes a much more straight-faced approach, with little of the scary stuff. It’s every bit as handsome, but the loss of the spookiness and silliness has leeched it of much of the original’s fun.

It opens with a doozy of a prologue. Magda (Natalie Dormer), a supernatur­al being who delights in destructio­n, delivers a monologue about a coming war that will pit all races against one another. Keen for that war to get a wriggle on, she marches through a cornfield full of Mexican workers, setting it ablaze and burning everyone in it. Her solemn ‘sister’, Santa Muerte (Lorenza Izzo), the Angel of Holy Death, gathers up the souls to usher them to the afterlife. One of the dead is the father of a boy called Tiago Vega.

Many years later, in 1938 Los Angeles, Tiago Vega (Daniel Zovatto) is a grown man, about to become the first Chicano LAPD detective. The promised race war is coming. Vega’s first assignment is to find the killer who left four bodies, mutilated and painted with Day Of The Dead make-up, baking in the LA River basin.

The investigat­ion of that grizzly murder is just a small part of City Of Angels’ story. John Logan, who created both this and the original series, has a lot of ideas he wants to cover. Broadly tied to real events, City Of Angels takes in systemic police racism, the evolution of the immigrant experience, government corruption, the eve of World War II (Rory Kinnear, as a German paediatric­ian/nazi, is the sole carry-over from the original series’ cast), and the hypocrisy of for-profit religion. That’s not to mention romances, family in-fighting and Nathan Lane cast marvellous­ly against type as a world-worn detective-cum-nazi hunter. It’s an awful lot to keep track of, the focus moving around so widely that progress in any one strand is as slow as the 405 in rush hour.

There’s an effort to give the knot of plots some cohesion by having Dormer play multiple roles as Magda shifts into different shapes to spread maximum mischief: a meddling assistant to a compromise­d councilman; a German mother manipulati­ng Kinnear’s Nazi; a zoot-suited revolution­ary. Though she seems to be having an infectious­ly fun time with the dressing-up box, her repeated appearance doesn’t bring everything together; it just makes the bits she’s in more fun.

City Of Angels has loads of ideas and hard echoes of the world right now, but there’s too much going on for one show. In trying to talk about so much, its message comes out a little garbled. OLLY RICHARDS

 ??  ?? Evil lurks within: demoness Magda (Natalie Dormer) casts a wicked eye over 1930s Los Angeles.
Evil lurks within: demoness Magda (Natalie Dormer) casts a wicked eye over 1930s Los Angeles.

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