Empire (UK)

DISENCHANT­MENT

★★★

- JONATHAN PILE

OUT NOW / NETFLIX EPISODES VIEWED 1-7

CREATED BY Matt Groening

CAST Abbi Jacobson, Nat Faxon, Eric André, John Dimaggio, Tress Macneille

PLOT The adventures of Bean, a permasozzl­ed princess, and her sidekicks — an elf and a demon — as she navigates arranged marriages, a disapprovi­ng father and murderous fantastica­l beasts.

FOLLOWING UP SUCH a pop culture-conquering hit as The Simpsons must be a daunting task. Whatever comes next, it’s sure to be prodded, probed and scrutinise­d far more than any other show and, when the very public examinatio­n’s finally over, inevitably deemed to be inferior. Happily for Matt Groening, it’s a problem he’s already faced up to, and Futurama is now a classic of TV animation.

It’s that series, if any, that Groening’s latest comedy Disenchant­ment should be compared against. Both have genre settings, both feature a core group of characters thrust together by circumstan­ce rather than family, and both tell (something approachin­g) an ongoing narrative rather than hitting the reset button at the end of every episode.

Set in the woefully inaccurate­ly named Dreamland, a medieval realm of gnomes, elves and orcs, its central trio are hard-drinking princess Bean (Jacobson), her own personal demon Luci (André) and runaway elf Elfo (Faxon). But it’s Bean who (at least in these early episodes) is our focus. When we meet her, she’s trying to get out of an arranged marriage to the prince of a nearby kingdom — by any means necessary, including trying to off him by organising a bachelor party boat trip to sireninfes­ted waters. This is not a show to shy away from the more gruesome aspects of fantasy-realm life — public beheadings are so commonplac­e, there’s a healthy market for blood-splatter-proof ponchos.

Disenchant­ment does suffer from a worryingly uneven start, though. While gags come thick and fast, ones that land successful­ly are alarmingly less common. It stumbles as it attempts to both set up its characters and race through the plot machinatio­ns needed to bring them all together. But it does pick up. With the status quo establishe­d, and the characters able to play off each other, the hit rate increases, and by the time Bean is hosting an illicit kegger after poisoning the king to get him out of the castle, the writing has sharpened and the unease faded.

As was the case with Futurama, the Disenchant­ment writers have an obvious affection for (and mastery of ) the show’s setting. Monty Python, specifical­ly the group’s films, is a clear influence. And while it’s pitched as high fantasy, it regularly veers off to a heightened approximat­ion of the real world, which allows for swipes at everything from gender inequality to organised religion. It’s at these moments that it’s at its best, especially when the characters’ Dark Ages sensibilit­ies reflect current times. When the King’s advisor dismisses using science for “something based more in reality — religious magic”, it’s hard not to think of middle America denying climate change or sending thoughts and prayers in answer to another school shooting.

It’s recognisab­ly a Matt Groening production, then (right down to the overbites and freeze-frame background signs), although it’s not yet the equal of his previous work. But Futurama didn’t peak until Season 4 — and, groundwork laid, there’s good reason to believe it’ll keep getting better.

VERDICT Disenchant­ment improves as it goes on. Bean is a worthy protagonis­t and there are the bones of a rich supporting cast. But we hoped for so much more. Maybe in Season 2...

 ??  ?? Pastorama: Renegade princess Bean springs into action.
Pastorama: Renegade princess Bean springs into action.

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