Los Angeles Times

WARNING: THE ANIMALS HAVE TAKEN QUITE ENOUGH

CBS aims to give the movie season competitio­n with a James Patterson tale

- By T.L. Stanley calendar@latimes.com

No need to head to the multiplex for big action, special effects and hair-raising thrills, says bestsellin­g author James Patterson, when the CBS adaptation of his novel, “Zoo,” promises all that — and rampaging wildlife, to boot.

“It should give the summer movies a run for their money,” said Patterson, a populist literary star perhaps best known for his Alex Cross franchise, less so for being understate­d. “There’s horror, sci-fi, suspense. It’s kind of James Patterson meets Stephen King meets Michael Crichton. It’s a scary fable.”

About 4 million fans have read “Zoo” since it was published in 2012 and topped the New York Times bestseller list. The story sets up a world in which animals of all stripe — from lions in Africa to do- mestic house pets in the U.S. — revolt against humanity. The series premieres June 30.

Their attacks, seemingly random at first, become more coordinate­d and devastatin­g over time, whether it’s newly liberated zoo animals preying on city dwellers or big cats and hyenas ambushing tourists on safari.

The reason for their tirade, which will become clear during the 13 hours of episodes, is the callous way that humans have treated them and the planet. Changes in the environmen­t, in short, have caused changes in animal activity that went mostly unnoticed for years. But the violence explodes, almost like a flipped switch, and man had better duck and cover and solve the growing pandemic or else.

“The notion is, we’re next for extinction and maybe we deserve it,” Patterson said. “The animals are the heroes here, and they’re mad for the right reasons.”

But don’t expect a summer-long lecture about global warming, said executive producer and co-writer Jeff Pinkner (“Fringe”), who noted that “Zoo” will be “thought-provoking in a fun, not fingerwagg­ing way.” So more popcorn flick and less “Inconvenie­nt Truth.”

Nor are all them is behaving animals behind bars or in research labs, skirting some ongoing controvers­ies about animal treatment in captivity.

The showis the network’s newest summer event series, following “Extant” and “Under the Dome.” “Zoo,” which by passed the pilot stage with a direct-to-series order from the gung-ho network, filmed in New Orleans. The Southern city and its environs stood in for internatio­nal locations like France, Japan and the Kalahari Desert.

“It feels big in scope, even though we didn’t travel to those countries,” said James Wolk (“The Crazy Ones,” “Mad Men”), who stars as a behavioris­t named Jackson Oz trying towarn the world about the impending animal pocalypse. “It’s globe-trotting and exciting, yet it’s really grounded with fully fleshed-out characters.”

Co-stars include Billy Burke (“Revolution”) and Kristen Connolly (“House of Cards”) in roles that don’t exist in the source material. Patterson, whose “Women’s Murder Club” books-to-TV-series lasted 13 episodes on ABC in 2008, said changes were necessary to translate “Zoo” frompage to screen.

Bad news then for readers with an affinity for the memorable character Attila, a sweet young gorilla that turned homicidal and busted out of its Brooklyn walk-up to terrorize the populace. Better news for loyalists of the central power couple, scientist-types Oz and his love interest, Chloe Tousignant (Nora Arnezeder). They remain the heart and driving force of the story.

“Book fans will recognize it because the core premise is still there,” said Patterson, who worked closely with the writers and show runners but didn’t object to structural difference­s for TV. “That old saw about the movie never being as good as the book may be true when you try to cram everything into two hours. But there are13 hours here, and that canmake the TV version different and even better.”

Handing over creative control may seem strange since the prolific Patterson, who holds the Guinness World Record for the most bestseller­s to hit No. 1 on the New York Times list and has 300 million-plus books in print, declared that “Zoo” was one of his favorite works.

“When I was writing it, I realized I hadn’t read anything like it before,” Patterson said. “It’s unpredicta­ble.”

Wolk confessed to being somewhat creeped out by the premise, where even the beloved family pet becomes a snarling threat to everyone’s well being. “I think people may start to be paranoid of their dogs,” he said only half-kidding. Thatdoes not include, of course, his own shepherd-Rottweiler mix, who’s so sweet that she “can do no wrong.”

Similar to superhero blockbuste­rs, “Zoo” will have loads of computer-generated images, though there were nearly 2,000 live animals on set over the course of the shoot, Pinkner said.

“There were rats, bats, elephants, bears, lions and wolves,” he said. “It’s always intimidati­ng and fascinatin­g towork with animals.”

Unlike some novels in the Patterson collection, “Zoo” is a one-off, though the book’s ending seems sequel ready. Patterson said he hasn’t made plans to write a follow-up or turn it into another of his long-running brands.

Whether it continues or not, CBS has already cashed in on the thriller’s initial season, selling it to Netflix for nearly $1 million an episode, proving its clout before the first ratings even register. It will be available on the streaming service shortly after its TV run, with CBS President and CEO Leslie Moonves declaring it “immediatel­y profitable for us.”

Pinkner described it as “a very energetic thrill ride,” with crossover potential like a good PG- or PG13-rated adventure. “It’s surprising and funny, and yet it may make us all think about the consequenc­es of our actions.”

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 ?? Hilary Bronwyn Gayle CBS ?? JAMES WOLK stars as Jackson Oz, amaverick behavioris­t in a race to figure out what’s behind a pandemic of rampaging wildlife in the CBS thriller “Zoo.”
Hilary Bronwyn Gayle CBS JAMES WOLK stars as Jackson Oz, amaverick behavioris­t in a race to figure out what’s behind a pandemic of rampaging wildlife in the CBS thriller “Zoo.”
 ?? Hilary Bronwyn Gayle CBS ?? KRISTEN CONNOLLY and Billy Burke are among the cast of “Zoo,” based on James Patterson’s bestsellin­g novel. “It’s a scary fable,” says the author.
Hilary Bronwyn Gayle CBS KRISTEN CONNOLLY and Billy Burke are among the cast of “Zoo,” based on James Patterson’s bestsellin­g novel. “It’s a scary fable,” says the author.
 ?? Patti Perret CBS ?? NONSO ANOZIE portrays Abraham Kenyatta in the CBS thriller, which despite its globe-trotting locales actually films in New Orleans.
Patti Perret CBS NONSO ANOZIE portrays Abraham Kenyatta in the CBS thriller, which despite its globe-trotting locales actually films in New Orleans.

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