Los Angeles Times

When crack ripped through the city

- lorraine.ali@latimes.com Twitter: @lorraineal­i

as a stock boy at the local Korean-owned liquor store and makes a little money on the side dealing weed with his Uncle Jerome (Amin Joseph).

But when he’s introduced to the lucrative world of cocaine through a wealthy former schoolmate, Franklin sees an opportunit­y to expand his financial outlook.

The problem is, he’s a good kid with a loving mom (brought to life by talented “Wire” alum Michael Hyatt). Franklin has the smarts but not the ruthlessne­ss required to run drugs on the mean streets of L.A. But just watch how the lack of opportunit­y, and the prospect of big money, can change a man.

British actor Idris does a stellar job conveying the struggles, emotional and monetary, of an ambitious young man born into a lowincome environmen­t with few ways out. The choices to get ahead should simply be labeled “bad” and “worse,” and they wreak havoc on his psyche, his family and the social fabric of the neighborho­od.

And oh, the neighborho­od. The vivid depictions of life there are often the best moments in “Snowfall.”

Sunlight streams though the narrow, palm tree-lined streets. Kids ride colorful banana-seat bikes down cracked sidewalks. Teens blast their boom boxes on the RTD bus. Crime happens, but not half as much as the normal everyday stuff. It’s a tight neighborho­od, not a war zone.

But we know what they don’t — that converging forces are about to rip them apart, and that’s the driving tension here.

If only all of “Snowfall” were as compelling.

The problem is that the series is split among three narratives, and the time spent on the other characters dilutes a story that could have been told through Franklin. They are given equal time but half the depth, and since their stories take so long to intersect, “Snowfall” can feel like a meandering exercise in patience.

Lucia Villanueva (Emily Rios) was born into a Mexican drug cartel, and she is plotting to expand the family empire. Teddy McDonald (Carter Hudson) is a sidelined CIA agent, reassigned from an important mission overseas to L.A.

Lucia’s back story is as shallow as her motivation­s. What we do know is that she robs her own family to get ahead, yet appears too meek to have grown up around such bad hombres.

As for Teddy, the best guess is that he’s surveying L.A.’s cocaine trade when he uncovers a clandestin­e CIA operation. The U.S. is using drug money to buy arms for Nicaragua’s Contra militants, and he is going to get to the bottom of it, or maybe join in, or who knows, because it takes forever to get anywhere with his goofy character. We do know that the only disguise the nerdy agent needs to trick seasoned drug dealers into thinking he’s one of them is a pair of aviator sunglasses. DEA agents, take note.

Then there’s the ridiculous­ly cartoonish Israeli drug dealer Avi Drexler (Alon Moni Aboutboul), the “Boogie Nights”-style porn star party in the Valley and the luchador (Sergio PerisMench­eta) who becomes a henchman for the Mexican cartel. All feature good actors handed poorly realized roles.

If they’d stuck with one story — Franklin’s — “Snowfall” would be another strong FX series. But as is, the drama is often as scattered and aimless as its title.

 ?? Michael Yarish FX ?? DAMSON IDRIS, left, plays Franklin to Amin Joseph’s Jerome in the FX series “Snowfall,” which looks back at a 1980s drug epidemic.
Michael Yarish FX DAMSON IDRIS, left, plays Franklin to Amin Joseph’s Jerome in the FX series “Snowfall,” which looks back at a 1980s drug epidemic.

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