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Shining beacon of light

Time-travel thriller Shining Girls wouldn’t be half as good without the great Elisabeth Moss.

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IN Shining Girls, Elisabeth Moss plays Kirby Mizrachi, a Chicago newspaper archivist who, having survived a brutal attack six years earlier – we are in 1992 – is brought out of her cocoon when the body of another woman is discovered with similar wounds.

It brings her into a rocky partnershi­p with Dan Velasquez (Wagner Moura), a reporter working his way back from an alcohol-tinged personal low point as they set out together to crack the case, going where the police don’t care to go.

Without putting too fine a point on it, lest one be accused of revealing a plot mechanism that in any case becomes implicitly obvious early on, viewers who have seen both series will be excused for thinking back a week and a half to Russian Doll, with which Shining Girls shares an interest in time travel, cosmic remodellin­g and quantum physics, as well as a compact heroine getting a handle on her life.

“He’s everybody, he’s nobody, he’s all the time,” Kirby says of her assailant, whose face she never saw.

Without putting too fine a different point on it, it is a serial killer story – one with a twist, most assuredly, but even the most twisted serial killer is basically a creep whose motivation­s, whether springing from human trauma or supernatur­al influence and embarked on as a sociopathi­c art project, are all too familiar.

There are only so many arrows in that quiver, however you decorate them, and however much sympathy for the devil might be created on the page or in the performanc­e.

They are “scary,” since the killer is required by law of the genre to try to kill again, but they are also, given a limited range of narrative moves, predictabl­e.

So it’s all to the good that showrunner Silka Luisa, working from Lauren Beukes’ 2013 novel, takes an original turn with her protagonis­t.

Kirby’s reality is fractured: Things in one place are in another, or they are different things.

Is this desk not her desk? Does she live with her mother or with a colleague?

Is her dog a cat, or is her cat a dog? Is her name even Kirby?

As to our killer, Harper Curtis, played by Jamie Bell – that is not a spoiler; you will have understood that within a few minutes – he is just a dude without qualities, presentabl­e if not exactly charming, who shows up here and there, lurking or attacking.

Although the series will get around to giving him a bit of a backstory and context, including an interestin­g but underused pal (Christophe­r Dunham as Leo) with some brief psychoanal­ysis from other characters, he is fundamenta­lly an abstractio­n, the execution of an idea that lets everything else happen.

Similarly, when we meet Jin-sook (Phillipa Soo), an astronomer working at the local planetariu­m, we do not need to see the wingless bee on her desk, calling back to the series’

opening scene, to know that Curtis and the screenwrit­ers have marked her as a target – it’s her job.

It’s taking nothing away from the rest of a fine cast to note that Shining Girls is 75% the Elisabeth Moss Show, and not merely because the world turns literally around Kirby.

An actress of great intelligen­ce and emotional nuance, immune to convention, Moss excels at characters with a note, or a block chord, of complicati­on.

Turning 40 this year, which is to say evidently older than Kirby, she creates a chronologi­cally amorphous person whom fate has locked in time.

Moss softens Kirby’s edges, pulls the body out of her voice, and tucks her head into her shoulders; she gives her a hunted animal look.

This will change, as she comes out of hiding and goes, incrementa­lly, on the offensive. Her choices are never pat; the series wouldn’t be half as good without her.

The series is an unusual mix of fantasy and horror with a newspaper procedural and though it strikes me as a little shaky on the procedure, the re-creation of a 1992 newsroom is absolutely spot on.

That the showrunner and the directors (including Moss) are women may have something to do with the series avoiding the more egregious faults of the genre; violence for the most part happens offscreen, or quickly; gore is restricted to crime scene photos.

In the end, the business of these stories generally comes down to the same questions: sorting out how long we have to wait before the killer gets his comeuppanc­e, if he does, and how many other victims might be thrown at us in the meantime; the mechanics of the killing; what twists, from the old bag of twists, eerie and otherwise, might be applied at the end; and whether the end will be or, as it too often is not in horror stories, an ending. – Los Angeles Times/tribune News Service

Shining Girls is available on Apple TV+.

 ?? ?? Remember when appointmen­t TV wasa thing? — Handout
Remember when appointmen­t TV wasa thing? — Handout

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