Chicago Sun-Times (Sunday)

ISLE OF ‘ THE WILDS’

Hear the call of this deeply involving survivalis­t series about teen girls on their own

- RICHARD ROEPER MOVIE COLUMNIST rroeper@ suntimes. com | @ RichardERo­eper

It’s impossible not to draw comparison­s to “Lost” and “The Lord of the Flies” and even “The Truman Show” when watching the ambitious and cutting- edge series “The Wilds,” a 10- part survivalis­t soap opera on Amazon Prime.

A plane flying over the Pacific Ocean crashes, with a diverse group of passengers miraculous­ly surviving and finding themselves stranded on a remote island that looks like paradise but contains dark secrets. We learn the back stories of the survivors in flashbacks to their lives before the crash.

Checkmark the “Lost” box.

† Young people stranded on an island attempt to establish some sort of democracy and work together for the common good, but

it’s not long before they’re at each other’s throats.

Checkmark “The Lord of the Flies” box.

† Something feels … not quite right on the island. There are too many convenient developmen­ts, as if someone is manipulati­ng events from afar and might even be watching their every move.

Checkmark “The Truman Show” box.

What’s so impressive about

“The Wilds” is how creator Sarah Streicher (“Daredevil”) and the deeply talented young cast members immerse us in this world so quickly and create an almost instant interest and empathy for these eight teenage girls, who on the surface seem to represent various archetypes — the Olympic hopeful, the antisocial bookworm, the quick intense lesbian, the Texas pageant princess, etc. — but turn out to be so much more than what their Instagram bios say.

The group was on a chartered plane heading to some kind of girlpower, self- esteem boosting retreat called the Dawn of Eve in Hawaii

when the plane hit heavy turbulence and crashed just off the coast of an uninhabite­d island. Turns out each one of these girls had been experienci­ng some serious trauma back home and they weren’t selected for this trip by accident, and I’ll leave it at that.

“The Wilds” tells us from the start the girls will get off that island — but at what cost, and for what purpose? In the opening scene, we’re in an interrogat­ion room, as a condescend­ing investigat­or ( David Sullivan) explains to a traumatize­d and bruised girl named Leah ( Sarah Pidgeon) that the quarantine will be over soon and her parents are on the way. We see quick- cuts of intense scenes on the island as the investigat­or continues: “Just to be clear, our primary goal is to conduct an investigat­ion. There’s a lot of haze surroundin­g your circumstan­ces that we just want to clarify.” She’ll soon be able to return to her life, he assures her.

“What was so f--- ing great about the lives we left behind?” says Leah, and from there we get our first glimpses of the eight survivors, including Olympic high- dive hopeful Rachel ( Reign Edwards) and her whip- smart and socially awkward twin sister Nora ( Helena Howard); the tough- talking outcast Dot ( Shannon Berry), who is caregiver to her terminally ill father ( Greg Byrk) and the gorgeous and narcissist­ic Fatin ( Sophia Ali), who packed her thousand- dollar suitcase with makeup and condoms and designer T- shirts.

As the survivors embark on the usual stranded- on- an- island rituals — rationing the little food and drink they have, searching for fresh water, trying to build a shelter — alliances are forged ( and broken) and hidden truths emerge. In addition to the engrossing flashback sequences that add so much depth and context to what’s happening on the island, we’re introduced to one Gretchen Klein ( Rachel Griffiths), a controvers­ial and slightly mad researcher who is the architect of the Dawn of Eve retreat and has a keen interest in everything that happens to the survivors. It’s complicate­d, and at times it’s deeply melodramat­ic and comes close to becoming overwrough­t, but the writing is strong and the performanc­es are earnest and indelible.

“The Wilds” isn’t afraid to take chances. Gretchen actually invokes the word “gynotopia” to describe a world in which women take their rightful place atop the hierarchy. Robyn Hitchcock’s version of the Psychedeli­c Furs’ “The Ghost in You” is featured prominentl­y in one episode that centers on Leah’s sexual history with a man nearly twice her age — a man who believed 16- year- old Leah when she lied and said she was 18. The girls find the torso of a mannequin and name it Marcus, a la Wilson the volleyball in “Cast Away.” There’s a shark in the water.

This is one strange and compelling and provocativ­e and deeply involving impromptu sleepover.

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 ?? AMAZON STUDIOS ?? Helena Howard ( from left), Mia Healey, Shannon Berry, Sophia Ali, Reign Edwards and Sarah Pidgeon star on “The Wilds.”
AMAZON STUDIOS Helena Howard ( from left), Mia Healey, Shannon Berry, Sophia Ali, Reign Edwards and Sarah Pidgeon star on “The Wilds.”
 ?? AMAZON STUDIOS ?? Toni ( Erana James) and Martha ( Jenna Clause) are two of the eight teenage girls stranded on a remote island on “The Wilds.”
AMAZON STUDIOS Toni ( Erana James) and Martha ( Jenna Clause) are two of the eight teenage girls stranded on a remote island on “The Wilds.”

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