The Arizona Republic

‘Equalizer’ remake is pandemic comfort food

- Kelly Lawler

“The Equalizer” isn’t anything special. But it’s perfectly fine, which might just be enough right now.

CBS’ new take on the crime drama, which first aired from 1985-89 and was adapted into a 2014 movie and 2018 sequel starring Denzel Washington, is a comforting­ly average procedural.

“The Equalizer” (which moves to its regular Sunday slot at 8 EST/PST starting Feb. 14) twists the formula by casting Queen Latifah as the eponymous vigilante, but not enough to make it unfamiliar. At another time it might have been boringly derivative. But with fewer series amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and many of them incorporat­ing its farreachin­g effects into their storylines, there’s something quaintly satisfying about this by-the-numbers drama.

The new “Equalizer” reimagines its vigilante protagonis­t Robert McCall as “Robyn” McCall, a CIA operative who left the “company,” as she calls it, after being disillusio­ned with her work.

She returns home to New York City without much direction, co-parenting her teen daughter, Delilah (Laya DeLeon Hayes) with her ex and hanging out with her Aunt Vi (Lorraine Toussaint). Her former co-worker William Bishop (Chris Noth) tries to convince her to return to the CIA or make a fortune as he does in private security. But a chance encounter with a young girl in a lot of trouble makes Robyn realize she can help people.

She enlists the help of her former CIA compatriot­s, including sniper Mel Bayani (Liza Lapira) and hacker Harry Keshegian

(Adam Goldberg) as she starts to set up her operation. In Sunday’s premiere, Robyn helps a young woman wrongly accused of murder, which pits her against a satisfying­ly evil tech executive and allows her, like Equalizers before, to win a gunfight without a weapon.

The action is smooth and exciting if a bit over-reliant on quick cuts and a moving camera. Robyn is an intriguing version of an archetypal character. Not only is her military and CIA experience a part of her backstory, but her experience as a Black woman informs her choices and style of vigilantis­m.

Occasional­ly, Latifah seems disinteres­ted in her character. But other moments in the pilot episode (the only one available for review) hint at a more magnetic lead to come. . Latifah and Hayes have strong chemistry, and an affecting scene between them at the end of the pilot hints at the new places this “Equalizer” can go.

 ?? BARBARA NITKE/CBS ?? Queen Latifah as Robyn McCall in the new CBS series, “The Equalizer.”
BARBARA NITKE/CBS Queen Latifah as Robyn McCall in the new CBS series, “The Equalizer.”

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