Baltimore Sun

Regardless of episode order, pacing off in ‘Kaleidosco­pe’

- By Nina Metz How to watch:

Heist stories have such a satisfying structure.

It’s not just getting one over on the man, but the lead-up: putting a team together, planning the heist, doing the heist and improvisin­g through unexpected problems. And then that pleasurabl­e sensation at the end: They got away with it.

So what happens if you take that structure and jumble it up so the typical order of things doesn’t matter? That’s the experiment­al premise behind “Kaleidosco­pe,” starring Giancarlo Esposito as a master thief who rounds up a crew to abscond with $7 billion in bearer bonds.

They’re targeting the world’s three richest people, who keep their assets in what is supposedly the most secure undergroun­d vault ever. Since bearer bonds are not assigned to any one individual, they are untraceabl­e and therefore vulnerable to theft. Hence, the ultrahigh security measures.

The show’s central heist is loosely inspired by the real-life theft of bearer bonds from a subterrane­an vault in Manhattan, which became flooded and vulnerable to a break-in during Hurricane Sandy.

One episode takes place six weeks before the heist, another the morning after, another seven years before and another just five days before the heist. All told, the story takes place over a 25-year span. When you hit play to start, everyone gets the finale last, but otherwise Netflix serves up the remaining episodes at random.

Is the series more compelling (or compelling at all) not only because it’s

nonlinear but also because we’re all collective­ly watching the episodes in a different order from one another? My gut says no.

There’s just not enough story or character developmen­t here to warrant eight episodes, let alone eight episodes that are juggling a gimmick. I’ll watch any show smart enough to put Esposito in the lead, but he deserves far better writing than he’s getting here.

Episode “Yellow” is the one I watched first, and it serves as a decent entry point, coming roughly at the story’s midpoint when the team comes together, one by one.

The camera zooms on Esposito’s face looking tired and haggard. Life has not been kind, thanks to circumstan­ce, but also because the worm turned when an old friend did him dirty. So revenge it is.

He assembles a roughand-tumble crew: an old pal he knew from prison here, a driver there, plus a couple of flunkies who are married to each other, one of whom is a safecracke­r. There’s also his lawyer, who is a weapons expert and fences stolen jewelry on the side.

In order to get this heist off the ground, they have to pull off a series of smaller heists that include everything from springing

Esposito’s character from prison (that would be the “Green” episode, and the one I think works best on a purely storytelli­ng level) to raising the seed money needed to fund their grand break-in.

The series has some challenges around delayed gratificat­ion, and creator Eric Garcia was smart to mitigate that by building in several minor heists along the way. Less intriguing is the parallel storyline of the fed who has been tracking this crew for years.

I like that Garcia and Netflix are playing around with form. The binge format doesn’t have to be locked into a set formula, but even if the writing were stronger I wonder how well this experiment would work.

There’s a clockwork energy to heist stories that’s interrupte­d here. It lacks the right buildup, but I’m not even sure if watching the episodes in chronologi­cal order would fix the issue. The pacing’s just off.

Nor does the story have the sort of ending that sends you off thinking:

Oh, that’s how it all came together. By the finale, I had lost all interest in the main heist itself.

But Esposito? He kept me pulled in.

 ?? NETFLIX ?? Giancarlo Esposito and Tati Gabrielle in “Kaleidosco­pe,” a heist series that follows a nonlinear format.
NETFLIX Giancarlo Esposito and Tati Gabrielle in “Kaleidosco­pe,” a heist series that follows a nonlinear format.

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