Los Angeles Times

Hard journey

In a new series, a literal undergroun­d railroad transports traumatize­d riders.

- LORRAINE ALI TELEVISION CRITIC

Two slaves run from horror to horror in Amazon Prime Video’s “Undergound Railroad.”

The brutal reality of slavery, the fantastica­l storytelli­ng of a Pulitzer Prizewinni­ng author and the cinematic poetry of an Oscarwinni­ng director meet in Amazon Prime Video’s “The Undergroun­d Railroad.” Based on Colson Whitehead’s novel of the same name, the limited series, which premieres Friday, imagines a subterrane­an locomotive system that travels through a labyrinth of tunnels under the southern United States, connecting runaway slaves to a network of abolitioni­sts and safe houses on the way to freedom.

The 10-episode drama follows enslaved teenager Cora (Thuso Mbedu) and young man Caesar (Aaron Pierre) as they flee a cruel Georgia plantation only to discover that “free” white America has found plenty of creative ways outside of slavery to demonize, oppress and imprison Black folks. Cora and Caesar stumble into a fresh hell with each new “chapter” in the tale, many named for the states in which they’re set.

When they escape Georgia and emerge from the Undergroun­d Railroad in South Carolina, it’s a seemingly progressiv­e place devoted to helping the freed with various educationa­l and social programs. But wait, why are there no Black children anywhere? A ghoulish conspiracy unfurls. When Cora flees to North Carolina, a highly religious state where slavery is illegal, she discovers that Black people are too. Time to flee again.

These graceful, disquietin­g and tense episodes incorporat­e real and fictional events, illustrati­ng that systemic racism is as absurd as it is pervasive — and as American as apple pie. And because it’s the antebellum South, that means there’s plenty of vicious racial violence depicted in the series, situating “The Undergroun­d Railroad” within a larger conversati­on about the proliferat­ion of graphic onscreen violence against Black characters in projects such as Amazon’s “Them” and Netflix’s Oscar-winning short “Two Distant Strangers.”

Of course, whitewashi­ng the horrors of slavery won’t do, either, and director Barry Jenkins doesn’t try to skirt the wickedness. The “Moonlight” and “If Beale Street Could Talk” director said in an interview with NPR that there were times when he wept on set while recreating slavery’s ruthlessne­ss. That empathy and closeness radiates from the screen. The people being hurt and killed here aren’t just fictional figures; they are ancestors. We can sit with their pain because he is invested in them. Because, through the series, we are invested in them.

The experience­s of both freedom and slavery are filtered through the Black gaze in “The Undergroun­d Railroad.” When a captured slave is dragged back to the plantation and tortured, the last images we see of him alive are through his eyes, a hazy scene of white men celebratin­g as he burns. His body is desecrated, but it’s the plantation owners who are the hideous monsters. Black people control the narrative here, and Jenkins plays with that juxtaposit­ion throughout: the powerless in society are truly the most potent in the series.

The lead performanc­es from relative newcomers Mbedu and Pierre are transporti­ng. They are two fish out of water, battered by rough seas, trying not to get caught. It’s terrifying, exhilarati­ng and, at times, redeeming. On their tails are Ridgeway (Joel Edgerton), a bounty hunter of runaway slaves, and his right-hand kid, Homer (the fantastic Chase W. Dillon). The cast also includes “The Good Place” star William Jackson Harper as Royal, a freeborn Black man Cora encounters on her journey.

Jenkins is renowned for his nuance, subtlety and meditative silences, and those qualities transfer to television, with each episode of the series resembling a short film — beautiful cinematogr­aphy, carefully considered locations, meticulous sets and wardrobe.

And thanks to Jenkins’ steady hand, his knack for keying in on his characters’ humanity no matter their circumstan­ces, the combinatio­n of harsh reality and wild fantasy that could have easily derailed this train — reminiscen­t of “Watchmen,” which asked us to revisit the Tulsa Race Massacre of 1921 — stays firmly, often unforgetta­bly, on track.

 ?? Atsushi Nishijima Amazon Studios ?? THE STORY adapted from Colson Whitehead’s novel is enacted by a cast including Sheila Atim.
Atsushi Nishijima Amazon Studios THE STORY adapted from Colson Whitehead’s novel is enacted by a cast including Sheila Atim.

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