Yorkshire Post - YP Magazine

TV PICK OF THE WEEK

- Godless Netflix, review by Yvette Huddleston

Written and directed by Scott Frank, this classy seven-part Western series refreshes the genre impressive­ly while delivering all the familiar tropes.

The mostly wordless opening sequence sets the tone. It lasts several minutes, allowing the camera to take in the horrific aftermath of a massacre in a small railroad town of Creede, Colorado. A train has derailed, bodies lie all around on the ground and a young woman in shock falteringl­y sings a hymn. It turns out the death and destructio­n are a result of an attempted raid of the train’s safe by ruthless outlaw Frank Griffin (Jeff Daniels) and his gang who are now on the look-out for one of their number, Roy Goode (Jack O’Connell), who, sickened by the level of violence, has made off with the loot, and shot Griffin in the arm while he was at it.

It is 1884 and the West is unforgivin­g, lawless and tough. Over in LaBelle, New Mexico, a mining disaster has left the town mostly without menfolk and it is now run by resilient, capable women. One of them is widowed farmer Alice Fletcher (Michelle Dockery)

who lives with her son Truckee (Samuel Marty) and her mother-in-law Iyovi (Tantoo Cardinal). When the exhausted Goode turns up in the middle of the night, Alice takes him in, but not before shooting him in the shoulder when he doesn’t respond to her request to identify himself.

Also on the trail of Griffin and his gang is wise lawman Marshal John Cook (Sam Waterston) and, less enthusiast­ically, La Belle’s ineffectua­l sheriff, Bill McNue (Scoot McNairy). McNue’s feisty sister Mary Agnes (Merrit Wever), widow of the town mayor, is far more likely to deal with any difficulty or challenge that arises.

The script builds the tension, almost impercepti­bly, cleverly delaying the confrontat­ion between Griffin and Goode to allow other characters and relationsh­ips to be developed. Performanc­es from the whole cast are authentic and believable, but Dockery and O’Donnell are particular­ly good. The cinematogr­aphy by Steven Meizler is lyrical and luminous, capturing the stark beauty of the landscape with lingering tracking shots – and for film buffs there are plenty of subtle references to iconic moments in the Western canon. One not to miss.

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