Los Angeles Times

‘Devs’ asks the big questions

Alex Garland’s Silicon Valley-set sci-fi thriller may make you want to watch it twice.

- ROBERT LLOYD TELEVISION CRITIC

In Alex Garland’s new FX on Hulu series “Devs,” Sonoya Mizuno plays Lily, a coding drone working in encryption at Amaya, a giant tech campus planted in a redwood forest a shuttle-bus drive from San Francisco. Her boyfriend, Sergei (Karl Glusman), is a budding genius in quantum computing, and after he demonstrat­es an algorithm that can crudely predict the behavior of a nematode, he is drafted by his lank-haired, bearded boss, Forest (Nick Offerman), into a project called Devs. (Alison Pill, as Katie, is Forest’s right hand, or per

haps he is hers.)

Everyone at Amaya knows about Devs, but outside of the few who work there, nobody knows what it is, or does, or is trying to do.

One day Sergei goes missing — how and why is never a mystery to the viewer — and Lily, searching for clues, enlists the aid of her old boyfriend, Jamie (Jin Ha), to decrypt an app on Sergei’s phone. Thus begins a familiar sort of thriller, if an unusually languid one, on the one hand, and a metaphysic­al sci-fi magic show on the other.

Garland, also the writer and director (as here) of the films “Ex Machina” and “Annihilati­on,” is a sci-fi classicist in that he begins with Big Questions and works from there. One would suppose from his work that he has read avidly, if not academical­ly, in science and philosophy and science of philosophy, and also, from its look as well as its tone, that “2001: A Space Odyssey” really blew his mind.

Obvious and subtle, intriguing and tiring, icy and sentimenta­l, “Devs” has the flavor of a late-night dorm room conversati­on: excited, searching and a little sophomoric.

The issues up for discussion include free will versus determinis­m, classical versus quantum physics, one universe versus the multiverse and that old standby, “What is reality?”

This will surely engage some viewers, even as others will exit our metaphoric­al dorm room to see what’s up in the snack bar. (FX has many specific spoiler requests, but these lines from the trailer give a pretty fair idea of the series’ thematic and dramatic concerns: “Nothing ever happens without a reason.” “You want to take them down? It’s impossible.” “The sense that you were participat­ing in life was only ever an illusion.” “It’s an amazing fact where love will take you, the road you’ll travel, the lengths to which you’ll go.”)

Garland, who has a degree in art history, reteams here with production designer Mark Digby, set decorator Michelle Day and cinematogr­apher Rob Hardy and, like his earlier work, “Devs” is a finely worked film art object. Every shot is wellconsid­ered, and everything within every shot is considered, as well.

The golden floating cube in which Devs is housed, with the main brain of its supercompu­ter displayed in a central vitrine — as if in a gallery, or the lobby of a boutique hotel — is as much the subject of the series as what happens inside it. (Hushed and gilded, it’s also a quasi-religious space.) The monumental, super-realist statue of a little girl that towers over the treetops on the Amaya campus is a plain-sight clue to Forest’s animating trauma, but above all it is a big, disquietin­g Thing, a Charles Ray sculpture times 10.

His actors too are beautiful and modern, even the ones who aren’t built like models, including Offerman, whose irises, for whatever photograph­ic or post-photograph­ic reason, have a strange translucen­t luminosity here. The first time we see Lily — Mizuno appeared in both “Ex Machina” and “Annihilati­on” — she is a thin, blurred shape against the light: an alien.

When, toward the end of the series, two characters, killing time while two other characters deal with heavier business, break unexpected­ly into something resembling casual conversati­on, it comes as a great relief. (Frisbee follows.) When actors we might think of as more or less villains speak with a sort of parental fondness of characters we think of as heroes, also late in the game, it’s a treat — a human moment one wishes had come earlier and more often.

Garland has taken television’s extra real estate and filled it by grabbing his story at both ends and stretching it like taffy to last eight hours. He hasn’t used the extra time to stitch in side plots and digression­s or develop more than cursory back stories. He just makes everything go slower, last longer. (“Devs” could easily fit into a film of average length, with no injury to story or character.) And so the action often proceeds with the ritual slowness of Noh theater or a Robert Wilson opera, if you like, or with frustratin­g lethargy, if you don’t.

It does give you plenty of time to think about things, and to see where Garland might be going before he gets there. If “Ex Machina,” about a femme fatale android and the dupe who loves her, was essentiall­y a James M. Cain thriller — “Double Indemnity” for robots — “Devs” has the bones of a Hitchcock thriller, with Lily the average Jane sucked into its orderly chaos. Though where Hitchcock relied on the MacGuffin, the meaningles­s central device that excites the characters and drives the plot, Garland is fully invested in the implicatio­ns of his thought-experiment gizmos.

Deep thoughts and shiny surfaces mark this recognizab­ly as a Garland work, but much of the story follows well-worn paths. The company’s security chief, Kenton (Zach Grenier), behaves pretty much as you’d expect the security chief in a thriller to behave.

The equation “science multiplied by grief ” has powered many an overreachi­ng antihero, while the question of whether knowing the future allows us to change the future, or merely creates the circumstan­ces by which the future is unavoidabl­y fulfilled, is Sci-Fi 101. “Are these the shadows of the things that Will be,” Scrooge asked the third spirit, “or are they shadows of the things that May be only?”

Given all that comes before, it’s not surprising that Garland offers something of a quantum ending, which might be regarded as happy or unhappy — or both — depending on your reading. (There is something quantum, for that matter, about Nick Offerman himself, his mix of forbidding formality and ordinary goofiness: He’s a particle and a wave.)

Still, for all that feels open or random about “Devs,” there’s nothing accidental about the finished product. Seemingly casual or gnomic dialogue early on — as when Forest tells Sergei, “Don’t worry, I know you’re going to figure it out” — turns out on second look to be carefully placed foreshadow­ing. Some will surely watch “Devs” twice. That’s my prediction of the series’ future, and I feel confident making it.

 ?? Raymond Liu FX ?? SONOYA MIZUNO, left,plays a coding drone whose boyfriend disappears into the secretive developmen­t lab run by Nick Offerman in Alex Garland’s “Devs.”
Raymond Liu FX SONOYA MIZUNO, left,plays a coding drone whose boyfriend disappears into the secretive developmen­t lab run by Nick Offerman in Alex Garland’s “Devs.”
 ?? Raymond Liu FX ?? IS ALISON PILL the right-hand person to Nick Offerman, or is it the other way around in “Devs”? That’s just one of the Hitchcocki­an series’ many mysteries.
Raymond Liu FX IS ALISON PILL the right-hand person to Nick Offerman, or is it the other way around in “Devs”? That’s just one of the Hitchcocki­an series’ many mysteries.

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