Chattanooga Times Free Press

‘Lodge 49’: Will the dud abide?

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH UNITED FEATURE SYNDICATE

If you can imagine “The Big Lebowski” remade as tragedy, you’re getting close to the spirit of “Lodge 49” (10:05 p.m., AMC, TV-14). This hard-to-categorize series combines off-beat and downbeat humor with a long meditation on the evaporatio­n of the American dream in blue-collar Long Beach, California.

Wyatt Russell stars as “Dud,” an aptly named 30-something beach bum whose career as a surfer ended with a snakebite in Central America, resulting in a wound that will not heal. Just as his name is one letter short of Jeff Bridge’s legendary Jeff “The Dude” Lebowski, he lacks Lebowski’s stoner audacity.

As “Lodge 49” begins, Dud appears licked by a life that has just barely begun. He and his twin sister, Liz (Sonya Cassidy), saw their relatively comfortabl­e existence vanish after the sudden death of their father and the discovery that their family home had been mortgaged to the hilt. Dud is frequently seen haunting his old neighborho­od, much to the outrage of the current owners, who bought the place in a foreclosur­e sale.

This distinctio­n alone points to how far we’ve come, or sunk, since the 1998 premiere of “The Big Lebowski.” It was never entirely clear how the Dude supported himself, but you knew he didn’t depend on his parents for either income or self-esteem.

The show’s title refers to a secret society or fraternal organizati­on that Dud stumbles upon after finding a member’s ring on the beach. He’s inducted into the lodge by Ernie (Brent Jennings), a plumbing supply salesman with gambling debts and loan shark problems, not to mention the hots for another lodge member’s main squeeze (Jocelyn Towne).

The lodge’s atmosphere of fraternity and half-baked mysticism awakens Dud’s curiosity. And its older members seem charmed by the young man’s affirmatio­n of their fading hangout and its arcane lore.

Created by author Jim Gavin and produced by Paul Giamatti, “Lodge 49” touches on any number of contempora­ry themes, from the decline of the middle class to the disappeara­nce of social organizati­ons and places where people can gather unrelated to family, work or consumeris­m.

Too much of the series’ message and metaphor is baked into the dialogue. The characters seem too aware and ready to discuss their place on the economic food chain.

Despite his newfound zeal for the lodge, Dud is a less-than-inspiring central character, a man too willing to sleep on his sister’s couch and hang out at a donut shop to be entirely interestin­g. The lodge members add color to this bleak picture but not enough to make “Lodge 49” appointmen­t viewing.

“Lodge 49” follows the fourth season premiere of “Better Call Saul” (9 p.m., AMC, TV-14). Stefan Kapicic joins the cast.

WATCH AND LEARN

The documentar­y “Sugar Town” (8 p.m., ID, TV-14) explores the death of a young black man, shot to death while handcuffed inside a police car in New Iberia, Louisiana.

NEW ON ACORN

Acorn begins streaming the police drama “No Offence,” featuring three strident and opinionate­d female detectives. Set in Manchester, it is produced by the creators of the original British version of “Shameless.”

OTHER HIGHLIGHTS

› The top 10 perform on a two-hour helping of “So You Think You Can Dance” (8 p.m., Fox, TV-PG).

› Thorns and petals mix on the live threehour season finale of “The Bacheloret­te” (8 p.m., ABC, TV-PG).

› Darius challenges ReSyst on “Salvation” (9 p.m., CBS, TV-PG).

› Bioterror strikes on “Elementary” (10 p.m., CBS, TV-PG).

› Cord cutters on “Mom” (8 p.m., CBS, repeat, TV-14).

› New obstacles arise on “American Ninja Warrior (8 p.m., NBC, TV-PG).

› Illusionis­ts audition on “Penn & Teller: Fool Us” (8 p.m., CW, TV-PG).

› “Dateline” (10 p.m., NBC).

Email Kevin McDonough at kevin. tvguy@gmail.com.

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