Call & Times

In new show, Perry Mason gets what he’s always lacked – a personalit­y

- +DQN 6WXHYHU

Perry Mason, the defense attorney hero of Erle Stanley *ardner’s legal thrillers (which have sold some 300 million copies since first debuting in 33), has been ripe for a remake for a long time. After some movie adaptation­s and a long-running radio serial, it was the TV version, which premiered in 5 and starred Raymond Burr, that determined what our courtroom dramas would look like for decades to come.

From avid armchair detectives to Supreme Court Justices, everyone loves Perry Mason, right" But what did we ever really know about the guy, other than he almost always won his cases" *ardner, who died in 0, wasn’t inclined to give Perry much of a backstory – believing, perhaps, that too much personalit­y interfered with the formula. Perry was forever right and could always dig up the evidence to prove his case at the last minute. +e’s a classic character, with the all the dimension of cardboard.

That’s why Rolin Jones and Ron Fitzgerald’s superb new ³Perry Mason,´ an eight-episode miniseries premiering Sunday on +B2, is the perfect lesson in how to update an icon, honoring the character by giving him the emotional depth and complexity that he previously never had.

Don’t get the wrong idea. The Perry Mason we meet in this version isn’t a pushover. As played by Matthew Rhys (³The Americans´), this Perry is a day-drinking (and night-drinking) underemplo­yed private investigat­or who gets into plenty of unseemly scrapes. +e makes his living, barely, by surreptiti­ously taking pictures of movie stars in flagrante delicto, in violation of moral clauses in their contracts; the studios then pay Perry to make the photos go away.

Perry’s wife (*retchen Mol) left him and took their young son with her. +e clings to what’s left of his deceased parents’ defunct dairy farm on the outskirts of a rapidly expanding – and always corrupt – Los Angeles. +e’s also suppressin­g some pretty intense trauma from his time on the French battlefiel­ds in World War I.

The series opens right after Christmas 3 , with the gruesome death of ³Baby Charlie´ Dodson, who was kidnapped for ransom. The baby’s grieving parents, Matthew and Emily Dodson (Nate Corddry and *ayle Rankin), have tenuous ties to a popular church headed by a dynamic radio evangelist named Sister Alice McKeegan (³2rphan Black’s´ Tatiana Maslany), and it isn’t long before the cops and a prosecutin­g attorney (Stephen Root) are determined to pin blame for the baby’s murder on the parents, who then turn on one another. The bold type of the daily headlines about all this couldn’t get any bigger.

Defense attorney E.B. Jonathan (John Lithgow) and his loyal office assistant Della Street (Juliet Rylance) take on Emily Dodson’s case. Jonathan hires Perry, as he often does, to poke into the bungled kidnapping and find what the cops missed – which, whaddya know, turns out to be plenty.

³Perry Mason´ perfectly and methodical­ly lays out a compelling and expanding mystery (which is, after all, the main attraction in a genre story), while giving remarkable shape to characters whose stories will resonate with a modern audience – such as Paul Drake, a black LAPD patrolman (Chris Chalk from ³When They See 8s´) mistreated by his white peers; or the good-humored coroner (Jefferson Mays) who lets Perry have an unofficial look at relevant stiffs in the city morgue. Shea Whigham (³Boardwalk Empire´) is also fantastic as Perry’s occasional hired help, Pete; as is Lili Taylor, playing Sister Alice’s controllin­g mother, Birdy.

Rhys brings a natural ease to playing this rougher, tougher Perry. I mean, Matthew Rhys really is the most, isn’t he" Able to simmer and seethe as a man down on his luck, but Must as often hilariousl­y wry. An early sex scene – between Perry and his aggressive lover, a biplane pilot named Lupe (Veronica Falcón) – is a painfully funny departure from +B2’s usual erotic romps. Not a drop of talent is wasted here, whether in Lithgow’s heartbreak­ing portrayal of a lawyer past his prime, or in Maslany’s unsettling depiction of a spiritual leader on the brink of divine madness.

Besides its slow, thoroughly satisfying build as a whodunit, the series ably handles a thematic tension between vile darkness and moral courage. ³Perry Mason´ is a worthy origin story, and it’s especially stirring when Perry at last begins to realize the power contained in the law, and his own arc bends toward justice.

––³Perry Mason´ (one hour) premieres Sunday at p.m. on +B2.

 ?? Merrick Morton/HBO ?? Matthew Rhys as Perry Mason in HBO’s new miniseries of the same name.
Merrick Morton/HBO Matthew Rhys as Perry Mason in HBO’s new miniseries of the same name.

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