Chattanooga Times Free Press

Esposito, Mcgregor and Easter evergreens

- BY KEVIN MCDONOUGH Contact Kevin McDonough at kevin .tvguy@gmail.com.

Brooding, quiet, intense and capable of anything — these are the traits associated with characters played by Giancarlo Esposito, especially since his turn as Gus Fring in “Breaking Bad.”

In the new series “Parish” (10 p.m., Sunday, AMC, TV-MA), Esposito portrays Gracian “Gray” Parish, an elegant, aging man overseeing a luxury car service in New Orleans, a business in decline since the advent of ride-sharing apps. He’s also mourning his son, murdered under mysterious circumstan­ces just the year before. Early on, Gray is late for a celebrator­y family dinner with his wife, Rose (Paula Malcomson, “Ray Donovan”), and slightly spoiled daughter, Makayla (Arica Himmel, “Black-ish”), because he lingered mournfully over a roadside memorial.

Into Gray’s life arrives an old acquaintan­ce (Skeet Ulrich), a freshfrom-prison reminder of the old days in “the life” of crime. He needs a favor, one last time, an easy chauffeuri­ng job for Horse, an African gangster (Zackary Momoh), newly arrived in the Crescent City from Zimbabwe.

Formulaic dramas are often defined by what they include. And leave out. From its “one last heist” premise to its “Fast and Furious” chase scenes through a Mardi Gras parade in “The Big Easy,” this series can remind us of so many we’ve already seen.

In an early moment, one of Gray’s subordinat­es begs off an important job because he has a “res” (reservatio­n) for dinner at the fabled Commander’s Palace restaurant. It’s never a good sign when characters written as “real” locals speak like tourists.

It’s also curious that the series, set largely in a Black milieu in New Orleans, avoids any popular music from the last half-century. Old blues, R&B and even a folky vintage recording of “House of the Rising Sun” set the musical tone. Because why would an “old school” guy like Gray, who shaves himself with a straight razor, listen to hip-hop?

Nobody can say Esposito doesn’t anchor the series. He executive produces it as well. And he’s very effective as the tortured, taciturn Gray. But does he have to show up in Every Single Scene?

“Parish” departs from cliche to get vaguely interestin­g only when the African heavies arrive, most notably Shamiso Tongai (Bonnie Mbuli, “Wallander”), Horse’s stylish and suspicious older sister, a woman trailing clouds of malevolenc­e. Around the 40-minute mark of an hourlong pilot, Horse and his entourage have a heated conversati­on in their exotic hotel. It’s the very first scene not featuring Gray.

› Streaming on Paramount+ since Friday, “A Gentleman in Moscow” (8 p.m., Sunday, Showtime, TV-14) stars Ewan McGregor as the central character Alexander Rostov, a former count who made the rather unfortunat­e decision to return to Russia after the 1917 Bolshevik Revolution. He’s saved from the firing squad by those in power with a sentimenta­l attachment to a poem he had written in his youth.

Instead of a death sentence, he is imprisoned in a former luxury hotel, consigned to sleep in a maid’s attic garret room, but afforded meals amidst the fading opulence of the dining room. In the best-selling 2016 novel by Amor Towles, Rostov’s life unfolds in flashbacks as his years in the hotel turn into decades.

› Moses (Charlton Heston) receives word from on high and leads the Israelites out of Egypt in the 1956 biblical epic “The Ten Commandmen­ts” (7 p.m., Saturday, ABC). While based on the Passover story, the film has been an Easter weekend tradition on ABC since at least 1973.

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