Hope, robots and Billy Crudup power series ‘Hello Tomorrow!’
Blink and you might miss it, but a man wearing a business suit and a jetpack casually blasts off in the first episode of the new series “Hello Tomorrow!”
He waves to his wife outside his suburban home and soars into the sky. Below him is a fascinating mix of ‘50s-era cars with tail fins that hover over the ground and robots that do everything from walk the dog to deliver mail.
If seems like the utopia we always dreamed about until we see a driverless truck accidentally smash into a homeowner. Not all is perfect in this futuristic world — and the creators want it that way, studded with misery and human quirks.
“Utopias terrify us,” said Lucas Jansen, who co-created the show with Amit Bhalla. “The ‘bots can do a lot for you, but they can’t relieve you of your human burden. And we’re ever so grateful and would hope that that continues to be the case as our society progresses.”
The Apple TV+ series taps into the alternate-reality, retro-cool of the ‘50s that’s so popular right now — see the film “Don’t Worry Darling” and the streaming series “For All Mankind” — as it explores the American dream.
At its heart is Jack, a traveling salesman played by Billy Crudup who sells condos on the moon — sorry, “lunar residencies” — to those disappointed with life on Earth. “We’re not just selling. We’re changing lives,” he tells his selling team.
It’s a scam, of course, one that only he knows is happening and it requires him and his hoodwinked team to occasionally hit the road before suckers wise up and want their money back.
The series explores the American fantasy that there’s something on the horizon — a medicine, a new product, a lottery win, any kind of Hail Mary — that will make our lives full. “We imagine that has a lot to do with the American experience right now,” said Bhalla.
While some viewers may see Crudup’s character as a con man like Bernie Madoff or a character straight out of “The Music Man,” the actor himself sees him more like a preacher, painting a better future for his flock.
“In Jack’s mind, providing that hope is proselytizing. That is the good word,” he said. “The good word is the future because the present is so mundane, it’s so boring. It doesn’t have any of the American promise. It just has the reality of living.”