USA TODAY US Edition

Rousing remake revisits critical period in U.S. history

New miniseries does a lot of things better

- ROBERT BIANCO

Some things we struggle to remember. Some things, we can’t be allowed to forget. Certainly for many viewers, memories of Roots, ABC’s groundbrea­king 1977 miniseries adaptation of Alex Haley’s novel, either have faded or are non-existent. It set ratings records and changed forever the “happy helpers” view of slavery created by Gone With the Wind — but it did so 40 years ago, in a very different TV environmen­t.

Cable’s History network could have just reintroduc­ed the old miniseries to a new generation rather than create this new Roots (Monday, 9 ET/PT, ★★★1/2 out of four), which airs on four consecutiv­e nights on History, Lifetime and A&E. But times and tastes have changed since 1977: We tell stories differentl­y, and we know more about this story than we once did.

And this story — about a man and a people, what brought them here and what happened to them once they arrived — deserves to be told.

Roots, however, is more than just a worthy venture; it’s an enthrallin­g one. There are a few clumsy spills into melodrama, but overall this eight-hour effort is rousing, funny, frightenin­g and heartbreak­ing — an affirmatio­n of life and a condemnati­on of racism in all its ancient and surviving forms.

And while this new version obviously owes much to the original, it goes its own way in many important aspects, starting with Monday’s premiere — which offers a richer exploratio­n of Africa’s Mandinka culture — and ending with the last, which goes more deeply into the African-American experience during the Civil War. Characters go in different directions than they once did in a world where life seems harsher and more violent, and appropriat­ely so.

Where the original cast was filled with establishe­d TV stars, the new one offers a mix of big names and new discoverie­s. Tony-winner Anika Noni Rose (Kizzy), Oscar-winner Forest Whitaker (Fiddler) and Justified star Erica Tazel, standouts all, share screen time with relative unknowns Malachi Kirby (Kunta) and Emayatzy Corinealdi (Belle) — both of whom should be stars. Kirby, in particular, is such a major casting find that he balances out the Chicken George of fellow Brit Regé-Jean Page, who is not yet up to carrying the weight Roots places upon him.

As before, we move through the generation­s — and with each generation­al shift, the show’s point of view (and director) changes. All of them preserve their cultural identity, passed on through beads, stories and music.

At its heart, Roots was (and remains) entertainm­ent as education, and there are times when the lessons land a bit heavily and the characteri­zations feel a bit light. (With the sometimes exception of Jonathan Rhys Meyers’s Tom Lea, subtlety seldom visits any of the white men.) But the best-drawn and best-played characters are as vibrant as ever, and the lesson they have to impart is perhaps even more important.

We didn’t fully absorb that lesson the first time around. Perhaps the second Roots will have better luck.

 ?? STEVE DIETL, HISTORY ?? Forest Whitaker, left, and Malachi Kirby, as Fiddler and Kunta, are two of many casting highlights in History’s Roots.
STEVE DIETL, HISTORY Forest Whitaker, left, and Malachi Kirby, as Fiddler and Kunta, are two of many casting highlights in History’s Roots.

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