Chicago Sun-Times

Moody ‘ Cardinal’ won’t let go of unsolved murder

- BILL KEVENEY

Cardinal is TV’s version of a riveting summer beach read — in a very chilly package. Hulu’s six- episode weekly murder mystery ( Friday, out of four), based on the novels of Giles Blunt, focuses on police detective John Cardinal ( Billy Campbell,

The Killing), whose tenacious search for a missing indigenous teen girl in a snow- covered, northern Ontario community eventually puts him on the trail of a serial killer.

Cardinal is a familiar murder- mystery type, the damaged but dedicated detective whose inability to let go of a deadend investigat­ion threatens his career but ultimately leads to solving the crime. However, the Canadian series adds an intriguing twist: the investigat­or also is the investigat­ed, as Cardinal’s behavior in a previous case may come back to haunt him.

Campbell, whose salt- and- pepper beard and unkempt hair bring his handsomene­ss down to mere mortal proportion­s, masterfull­y inhabits a tired, weathered man struggling with his wife’s mental illness and the physical distance from a loving daughter who attends school in Toronto. Profession­ally, despite frustratio­n with the brass, he’s a relentless investigat­or.

Viewers meet Cardinal during a hohum shopping- center stakeout, when he’s shaken from his stupor — literally and figurative­ly — by detective Lise Delorme ( Karine Vanasse, Revenge) and news that the teen girl’s frozen body has finally been found, after the Algonquin Bay police department had moved on to other investigat­ions and Cardinal, angered by that decision, has been demoted.

The reopened case revitalize­s Cardinal. So does Delorme, who lacks his experience but matches him in savvy and persistenc­e. The jousting and bonding between the senior Anglo investigat­or and his younger French- Canadian partner gives Cardinal emotional depth.

Viewers meet the murderer, Eric Fraser ( Brendan Fletcher), early in the series, which follows the police and the suspect on separate paths destined to intersect. Some plot coincidenc­es seem too pat, but the intrigue pulls viewers into the episodes, written by executive producer Aubrey Nealon ( Orphan

Black). Torture scenes are troubling — and still too common in TV and movies — although some of the gruesomene­ss is hinted at or shown after the fact.

The wintry setting works on literal and metaphoric­al levels, as a picture of nature’s cold beauty and a defining element that grounds Cardinal in place and mood. ( The abundance of snow and ice, featured in gorgeous cinematogr­aphy, might help heat- stricken viewers drop their internal thermostat­s a few degrees.)

Seemingly endless birch forests define Algonquin Bay’s remoteness, while a thick snowpack, frozen lakes and opaque, low- hanging clouds echo the character’s confined, muffled emotional core — which only his wife, his daughter, the teen victim’s mother and now Lise can penetrate. For viewers fearful of commitment,

Cardinal resolves its crime over its sixepisode first season. Fortunatel­y, the series has been renewed for two more seasons, leaving time to investigat­e other crimes from the novels and the characters’ messy lives, including Delorme’s fascinatin­g ( and Cardinal- like) struggle to balance the profession­al and personal.

That’s good news for viewers, whether they’re watching at the beach house, the ski chalet or any place ( or season) in between.

 ?? HULU ?? Billy Campbell plays a determined homicide investigat­or in Hulu’s Cardinal.
HULU Billy Campbell plays a determined homicide investigat­or in Hulu’s Cardinal.
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