USA TODAY International Edition

CBS’ ‘ Clarice’ will not be ‘ Silenced’

- Kelly Lawler Columnist

“Hannibal” got here first, and did it better.

CBS‘ new “The Silence of the Lambs” sequel “Clarice” ( premiering Thursday, 10 EST/ PST, ★★☆☆) joins a long line of attempts to adapt the Thomas Harris novels about a cannibal and a young FBI agent. But while some adaptation­s, such as NBC’s 2013- 15 “Hannibal” and the celebrated 1991 Jonathan Demme film, are stunning works that elevate the grisly subject matter, “Clarice” simply doesn’t match the potential of the characters and stories.

“Clarice,” which turns the heroine of “Lambs” into the lead of a procedural cop show, has all the depravity of the film with none of the artistry. Without the trappings of Hannibal and friends, there might be a good show here about the FBI in the 1990s. But instead, “Clarice” feels like a cheap knockoff that squanders its source material.

Set in 1993, after the events of the film, the new series follows FBI Special Agent Clarice Starling – Rebecca Breeds takes on the role Jodie Foster played in the movie – in her work as she recovers from the trauma of her encounter with serial killer Buffalo Bill.

Struggling to shake off her post- traumatic stress disorder in therapy, Starling is called to Washington by new Attorney General Ruth Martin ( Jayne Atkinson), the former senator whose daughter Starling saved from Bill. Ruth sticks Clarice on “VICAP,” the FBI’s new elite violent crimes unit, much to the chagrin of the group’s commanding officer, Agent Paul Krendler ( Michael Cudlitz), who thinks she’s a dumb rookie who got lucky once. Her fellow agents are slow to warm to her.

“Clarice” tries to connect to “Silence” through a relentless series of hallucinat­ions and flashbacks. Moths are everywhere. The score is oppressive­ly tense and screechy. The series is shot as though lights were a luxury it just couldn’t afford. Stomach- churning scenes repeatedly portray Clarice’s ordeal with “Lambs” serial killer Buffalo Bill ( who often is seen sewing human skin), a gratuitous way to add horror thrills to a drama that doesn’t really require them.

It’s hard to see the intention of “Clarice” from the first five episodes made available for review. Four deal with what appears to be a long- term mystery about a potential murder conspiracy. One is a stand- alone story about a Waco- like compound in a standoff with the FBI. The varying structure of each episode only adds to the show’s overall identity crisis.

There might be decent cop show beneath the layers of aggressive stylizatio­n. Writers are more willing to address racism than many similar network cop shows through Ardelia Mapp ( Devyn Tyler), a Black agent who struggles in grunt assignment­s while Clarice enjoys a meteoric rise through the bureau. But constantly linking it to the Hannibal story is a reach, underminin­g what makes the series unique.

Yet through the mess of moths and unbearable moodiness, it’s hard to see anything else.

 ?? PROVIDED BY BROOKE PALMER/ CBS ?? Rebecca Breeds is Clarice Starling in “Silence of the Lambs”- inspired series, “Clarice.”
PROVIDED BY BROOKE PALMER/ CBS Rebecca Breeds is Clarice Starling in “Silence of the Lambs”- inspired series, “Clarice.”
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