Miami Herald

Netflix’s ‘Obliterate­d’ delivers action and gross-out comedy

- BY FRED TOPEL UPI.com

“Obliterate­d,” which is now streaming on Netflix, combines gross-out comedy with hardcore action. The unlikely combinatio­n proves exceedingl­y effective at both genres.

Ava Winters (Shelley Hennig) leads an elite, anti-terrorist team on a mission in Las Vegas. McKnight (Nick Zano) is the blond, stubble-faced tough-guy hero.

Lerner (Kimi Rutledge) is their tech genius. Gomez (Paolo Lázaro) is their sniper. Yung (Eugene Kim) flies the helicopter.

The team thinks they’ve foiled a bomb plot, so they are officially granted leave and decide to celebrate the victory before their next assignment­s. Their wild party includes alcohol and drugs — from marijuana to Adderall and ketamine.

Then they get intel that the bomb they foiled was a decoy. There’s still a real bomb in Las Vegas, and now they’re back on duty, inebriated and in some cases hallucinat­ing.

Episode 1 of “Obliterate­d” establishe­s the team and sets up the plot. The cast has a real rapport as if they’ve been on hundreds of missions together. They rib each other’s foibles and hang-ups.

Many fill action genre roles like McKnight as the rogue bad boy, Winters as the by-the-books leader frustrated with the wild card, Yung as the monogamous married man and Lerner as the desk agent with a crush on McKnight.

There are some twists, though. Trunk (Terrence Terrell) inadverten­tly comes out to McKnight during the party, so that is something with which they have to deal throughout the intense circumstan­ces. Not in a homophobic way, but learning some major news about your friend and colleague can be distractin­g on a mission.

The action scenes are exciting with hardware blasting terrorists and Winters outsmartin­g large, bad guys in fights. The show satirizes the tradition of the bomb-squad expert (C. Thomas Howell) disarming the bomb at the last second.

Filming on location in Las Vegas gives “Obliterate­d” the look of a crisis occurring in a real place. That tops most action movies these days, which film most of their action in front of screens.

From Episode 2 on, the team is back looking for the real bomb and coping with the side effects of their partying. This is what leads to gross-out comedy in action movie scenarios, like people getting sick in a helicopter because of what they’ve consumed.

Those gross-out jokes pay off. It’s not just vomit, farts and poop. Those bodily fluids impede the team’s ability to do tech and field work.

Trunk has the munchies all night, which is a fun, running joke in every episode. The effects of the drugs intensifie­s the later the night goes on as they wouldn’t be at their maximum potency immediatel­y.

Like many raunchy comedies, “Obliterate­d” is full of gratuitous nudity. In a magnanimou­s example of fairness, there is just as much male nudity as female.

“Obliterate­d” introduces a fun team of heroes whom it would be nice to see have more adventures in subsequent seasons. Contriving another scenario in which they are obliterate­d may be a stretch, but not impossible, and they would be fun to watch sober, anyway.

 ?? Courtesy of Netflix ?? Ava (Shelley Hennig) goes undercover at a Las Vegas party in a scene from the Netflix series ‘Obliterate­d.’
Courtesy of Netflix Ava (Shelley Hennig) goes undercover at a Las Vegas party in a scene from the Netflix series ‘Obliterate­d.’

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