Empire (UK)

THE WHEEL OF TIME

- JAMES DYER

★★★ OUT NOW (AMAZON PRIME VIDEO) EPISODES VIEWED 6 OF 8

SHOWRUNNER Rafe Judkins CAST Rosamund Pike, Zoë Robins, Josha Stradowski, Daniel Henney, Madeleine Madden

PLOT In a world in which only women can (safely) use magic, sorceress Moiraine (Pike) arrives at a village in search of The Dragon Reborn — the reincarnat­ion of a legendary hero. After an attack by nightmaris­h creatures (trollocs), she, along with five possible candidates, sets out on a journey to either save the world or break it.

IF THERE’S ONE thing The Wheel Of Time

isn’t short on, it’s substance. Robert Jordan’s sprawling fantasy spans 15 hefty tomes (including one prequel), and took 29 years to complete. Steeped in fathoms-deep lore and with enough plot-threads to knit a scarf around the M25, the series is among the most epic fantasies ever written, so when Jeff Bezos demanded Amazon whip up an answer to Game Of Thrones,

this was an obvious choice.

But where Thrones was, at heart, a very human story of intrigue, incest, treason and treachery (with dragons and White Walkers kept on a deliberate­ly low flame), The Wheel Of Time

wears its fantasy credential­s embroidere­d on wizardly sleeves. The first episode alone features a reincarnat­ed magician, mystical prophecy, an army of bestial trollocs, and Rosamund Pike flinging fireballs. Throw in heroes with Big Destinies and ominous talk of The Dark One, and there’s little in the way of access points for those who believe such things belong firmly in the basement of the local Games Workshop.

Which is a shame, as The Wheel Of Time is far from just another tired yarn of ogres and goblins. A long time ago, we are told, men broke the world with magic (typical), leaving women to pick up the pieces (even more typical). The result is a society in which women quite literally hold The Power, with a rich line-up of female characters who neither have to parade around naked nor be abused to warrant screen-time. It’s into this world that our five rural naifs are thrust: Nynaeve (Zoë Robins), Rand (Josha Stradowski), Mat (Barney Harris), Perrin (Marcus Rutherford) and Egwene (Madeleine Madden). Plucked from a sleepy hamlet by Moiraine (Pike, excellent, if terribly stern), they are whisked away from their home on a quest to save the world. It’s a story that very quickly snowballs, becoming vastly more complex as it does so.

The biggest obstacle to ever discoverin­g that, however, is the show’s first episode, which is thick with stodgy set-up and hoary tropes. Fans of the novels may bristle at some of the changes (the teenage leads have been aged up and the show is both bloodier and bawdier), while newcomers may find its earnest tone, clunky exposition and variable effects a turn-off. Thankfully, Amazon has chosen to drop the first three episodes at once, allowing viewers to get quickly through the rather leaden introducti­on and into the series proper. It’s then, once the story’s knottier aspects begin to emerge, that the narrative starts to take hold, feeding into a story that gets better with each consecutiv­e episode.

Leaning into the genre as it does, this probably won’t manage the Thrones-like crossover Bezos demanded, but The Wheel Of Time is a rich, enveloping fantasy nonetheles­s, and one that, with a little patience from viewers, could easily sustain eight or more seasons of its own.

 ?? ?? Rosamund Pike as sorceress Moiraine Damodred.
Rosamund Pike as sorceress Moiraine Damodred.

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