Gulf News

‘THE NEVERS’ IS HBO’S NEXT GREAT FANTASY SERIES

Supernatur­al realism, complex storytelli­ng, fantastica­l powers and topical realities meet

- By Lorraine Ali —Los Angeles Times

Kicking butt in corsets and slaying with parasols, Victorian sci-fi drama The Nevers arrives under, or at least alongside, a cloud: Creator Joss Whedon, who left the series in November citing exhaustion, has been the subject of multiple allegation­s since last summer of creating an abusive work environmen­t on other projects, including by Justice League’s Ray Fisher and Buffy the Vampire Slayer’s Charisma Carpenter and Michelle Trachtenbe­rg.

But if this meant HBO faced an even taller order turning its ambitious new series, now helmed by showrunner Philippa Goslett, into a worthy successor to True Blood, Game of Thrones and Watchmen, it’s one the cable giant has surmounted.

Premiering Sunday, The Nevers ably continues the network’s tradition of making fantasy and sci-fi a prestigiou­s television pursuit, this time in the splendour and grit of 1899 London.

Split into two parts consisting of six and four episodes apiece due to production delays caused by the Covid-19 pandemic (the second instalment’s premiere date has yet to be announced), The Nevers is a joy to watch and a thrill to follow. Supernatur­al realism, complex storytelli­ng, fantastica­l powers and topical realities meet in this smart, suspensefu­l and colourful production. A litany of nuanced characters keep this otherworld­ly tale grounded. Suspensefu­l sleuthing and action-packed battles move the story along at a rapid clip. And all the lush scenery and ambitious wardrobe along the way — from London’s sewers to its high society — are a visual candy shop of period nostalgia.

The city is abustle, still reeling from an inexplicab­le event three years earlier that imbued a portion of the female population, and a handful of men, with paranormal abilities. The Touched, as they’re so delicately called, inspire some curiosity and plenty of fear among their fellow citizens, and a campaign to rid England of this “feminine plague” is building steam.

Touched widow Amalia True (Laura Donnelly) offers a safe haven for these human “oddities” in an old orphanage. She possesses extraordin­ary fighting skills, sees snippets of the future and drinks like a sailor. Her bestie, inventor Penance Adair (Ann Skelly), sees all forms of energy — which comes in handy during the dawn of electricit­y — and devises machines, weapons and more to defend against those who wish her cohabitant­s harm. Each has a different power: one makes gardens grow by simply touching the soil; another compels people to spill their deepest secrets in her presence.

Women’s power, and the fear of it, propels The Nevers. Divisive politician­s have declared the Touched a direct threat against the empire. No one appears to know who or what is behind the mysterious phenomenon of 1896, when “not one man of stature” was afflicted, as Lord Massen (Pip Torrens) says to his government­al cohorts. “That’s the genius of it: They came at us through our women. ... The heart of our empire brought to a shuddering halt by the caprice and ambitions of those for whom ambition was never meant.”

Watching women seize equal power, and the patriarchy panic over such abrupt change, is beyond entertaini­ng.

But the angry old boys club isn’t the only opposing force in this tale where pious religiosit­y meets the scourge of modernity. A terrorist faction of the Touched led by the madwoman Maladie (Amy Manson) is thought to be responsibl­e for a string of murders and disappeara­nces. She and her gang of gifted thugs, which includes fireball Annie (guess how she kills), are being tracked by police investigat­or Frank Mundi (Ben Chaplin). Their reign of terror has put a target on the backs of those known to possess abilities.

Disabled philanthro­pist Lavinia Bidlow (Olivia Williams) cautions against maligning the Touched, immigrants and other “deviations” from the norm. “It is the end of a century,” she proclaims. “These ancient prejudices have no use.” She funds the orphanage while using her younger brother, Augie (Tom Riley), as a de facto footman. They interact with a cast of diverse and engaging characters, from Hugo Swann (James Norton), a pansexual aristocrat and master extortioni­st who runs a private sex club, to doctor Horatio Cousens (Zackary Momoh), a West Indian immigrant who literally heals with his hands, and deranged American surgeon Edmund Hague (Denis O’Hare), who relishes the ghoulish delights of Victorian surgical procedure.

The Nevers is for anyone who loved Penny Dreadful or Harlots, WandaVisio­n or Buffy the Vampire Slayer. This period drama about the persecutio­n — and power — of the marginalis­ed goes wide on genre appeal, while homing in on painfully contempora­ry themes. And it’s full of riddles designed to keep us hooked.

The Nevers is for anyone who loved Penny Dreadful or Harlots, WandaVisio­n or Buffy the Vampire Slayer.

 ?? Photos courtesy of OSN ?? Laura Donnelly and Ann Skelly in ‘The Nevers’.
Photos courtesy of OSN Laura Donnelly and Ann Skelly in ‘The Nevers’.
 ??  ?? James Norton.
James Norton.

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