Chicago Sun-Times

‘ THE CHI’ PAINTS A RICH, BOLD PORTRAIT OF THE WINDY CITY

- Kelly Lawler Columnist USA TODAY

The Chi wants you to know there’s more to the stories you see on the news.

Showtime’s superb new drama ( Sundays, 10 ET/ PT, eeeg) offers a deep and thoughtful look at the South Side of Chicago and a loosely connected group of its residents. Created by Lena Waithe, who last year became the first African- American woman to win a comedy writing Emmy for her work on Master of

None, The Chi appears to be a direct response to the politiciza­tion of the city and its violence. The lush and moving series gives faces, names and stories to people often dehumanize­d in statistics and media reports.

With a remarkably talented ensemble cast, The Chi unfolds an intricate story about mostly young black men and adolescent boys living in the neighborho­od, their experience­s marked by family, friends, economic circumstan­ces, and violence.

The Chi doesn’t deny the city’s bloodshed but instead offers a deeper understand­ing of it. The series has a confident sense of its place, helped by on- location filming and Waithe’s smart scripts. Its disparate characters are brought together primarily as a result of two connected murders, and the story is less about who did it and more about what happens next. Both deaths are heartbreak­ing, senseless and cause ripple effects in the lives of the victims’ families and friends. The tragedies also are shrugged off by disinteres­ted parties, be they cops, bystanders or neighbors.

The series opens by introducin­g its large cast but revolves chiefly around four men: Brandon ( Jason Mitchell,

Mudbound) is a chef with dreams of opening his own restaurant. Emmett ( Jacob Latimore) is a too- carefree teen who quickly learns responsibi­lity to care for his toddler son. Ronnie ( Ntare Guma Mbaho Mwine) is a drifter and confidenti­al informant. And Kevin ( Alex Hibbert) is a middlescho­oler forced into a more adult world when he’s in the wrong place at the wrong time.

The casting is impeccable all around, but Mitchell and Hibbert, a star of the Oscar- winning Moonlight, are breakouts, grounding the series’ exceptiona­l fourth episode.

The Chi falters by relying too heavily on happenstan­ce to assemble its characters and push its plot.

But once The Chi starts moving, viewers might forgive the too- coincident­al circumstan­ces that brought them together.

More important is the emotion and humanity of these characters, and

The Chi offers a raw portrayal of their strengths and flaws, for better or worse.

 ?? MATT DINERSTEIN/ SHOWTIME ?? Jerrika ( Tiffany Boone) and Brandon ( Jason Mitchell) help keep “The Chi” grounded.
MATT DINERSTEIN/ SHOWTIME Jerrika ( Tiffany Boone) and Brandon ( Jason Mitchell) help keep “The Chi” grounded.
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