The Day

Stephen King Hulu series starts slow but gets better

- By VERNE GAY

WHAT IT IS: “Castle Rock,” streaming now on Hulu

WHAT IT’S ABOUT: Henry Deaver (André Holland, “Moonlight”) returns to his hometown of Castle Rock, Maine, after he gets a mysterious request to present a habeas corpus — or demand that a person under arrest is brought before a judge — for a prisoner at the local Shawshank State Prison.

This prisoner (Bill Skarsgård, “It”) has no name, no background and no affect. He’s deeply strange, and had been secretly imprisoned by the former warden, Dale Lacy (Terry O’Quinn). While back in town, Henry learns about the progressiv­e dementia of his mom, Ruth (Sissy Spacek), and that an old family friend, Alan Pangborn (Scott Glenn), has moved in with her. He also re-connects with his childhood pal and next-door neighbor, Molly Strand (Melanie Lynskey). Like Pangborn, she knows something about Henry’s own secret — why he disappeare­d for eleven days back in 1991.

This 10-parter — created by Stephen King, Sam Shaw and Dustin Thomason and produced by J.J. Abrams — is set in the King universe, and based in Castle Rock — the town of other novels, like “Cujo” — linking various King characters, stories andthemes.

MY SAY: Almost perfectly pleasant on the outside, depraved and rotten on the inside, Castle Rock is the Stephen King Potemkin village we’ve all visited many times before — or fans certainly have — in about a dozen novels and short stories.

There’s something off about the locals, these closefiste­d Mainers with their pasty complexion­s untouched by a warm sun, and their souls frozen as hard as the ground in December. Something is evil here, something or someone.

After all these years with this fictional Maine setting — or obsession — you’d think King would’ve moved on to a different state by now, or some place more normal than paranormal, like (say) Delaware. But fans know better, and King, too. It’s all here in Castle Rock, one of the epicenters of the King universe and imaginatio­n. Besides, his Maine isn’t so much a state as a state of mind, where the mysteries of human perception don’t yield easily or at all to rational explanatio­n. This makes the dark corners in that archetypal dark house impenetrab­le and unknowable.

Molly Strand, with her “shining” talent (or what appears to be something like that), is someone we’ve seen facets of before.

Meanwhile, Holland’s Deaver exists in some sort unsettled quantum state, as both Castle Rock outsider and insider, and as high-minded idealist and someone with a closet full of Castle Rock skeletons of his own.

Is “Castle Rock” in fact scary? Over the first four episodes, not really. It’s mostly portentous and (occasional­ly) plodding. The story picks up momentum in later episodes, and direction, too.

That trail of crumbs is definitely leading somewhere, and you’ll find yourself wanting to find out where. It will not be — spoiler alert — a happy place.

 ?? PATRICK HARBRON/HULU ?? Andre Holland stars in “Castle Rock.”
PATRICK HARBRON/HULU Andre Holland stars in “Castle Rock.”

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