New York Post

SLITHER AND YON

Her passionate search for a ‘sea dragon’ in ‘The Essex Serpent’

- By LAUREN SARNER

‘THE Essex Serpent“,” starring Tom Hiddleston and Claire Danes, is an intriguing drama that likely won’t be for everyone … but will reward those who don’t mind a show that’s strange and murky.

Premiering Friday (May 13) on Apple TV+ — and based on the bestsellin­g 2016 novel of the same name — the story is set in Victorian-era England and follows Cora Seaborne (Danes), a London widow who has a keen curiosity about science and the natural world (especially paleontolo­gy) and loves reading Darwin. After her abusive husband dies, she’s free to pursue the life she wants. Intrigued by newspaper reports of a “sea dragon” sighted in Essex, she travels there to investigat­e, she’s convinced that the serpent could be a real creature that escaped evolution.

There, she stays with the local vicar, Will Ransome (Hiddleston) and his wife, Stella (Clemence Poesy, “Harry Potter”). She connects with Will, even though he disapprove­s of the mass belief in the serpent and is determined to convince everyone that it’s not real. Although Cora and Will represent a typical “faith versus science” argument, they’re polite about their difference­s, and this plays out more like a dance between them than a true fierce clash.

Unfortunat­ely for Cora, things become complicate­d when a local girl turns up dead, and, because Cora is an outsider enthusiast­ic about finding the serpent, the villagers view her with suspicion.

“The Essex Serpent” is hard to categorize. It’s got elements of mystery and a death that sparks a series of events, but it’s not a “whodunit.” It’s got interperso­nal drama, since Will and Cora forge an emotional bond that goes past the boundaries of propriety, despite the fact that Will is married – and, to complicate matters, Cora’s friend from London, the ambitious and slightly smarmy young surgeon Luke Garrett (Frank Dillane), has the hots for her. He’s dismayed to see her going off to Essex in what he sees as a foolish endeavor and a waste of time.

The show’s romantic elements are understate­d; the series isn’t a bodice- ripper like “Bridgerton” or“Outlander.” And it’s probably got too much Victorian-era surgery scenes to appeal to fans of those shows (or of lighter period-piece fare such as “The

Gilded Age”). Audiences who liked the Clive Owen series “The Knick ”or the underrated 19th century murder tale series “Alias Grace” will enjoy it.

The show also has a prominent focus on the nature of superstiti­on in an insular community, with characters conversing about Marxism and Socialism. For the most part, all of these disparate plotlines and themes blend well together. Tonally, it isn’t as messy as it could be — an impressive feat, considerin­g the scattered nature of these topics.

But the narrative does feel meandering. “The Essex Serpent” is part of the age-old “something spooky might be happening in this remote coastal area” genre most recently exemplifie­d by “Midnight Mass,” but it’s not as sharp or suspensefu­l as that series, since it’s less committed to a particular category.

Hiddleston and Danes both turn in predictabl­y solid performanc­es. Danes bristles with a steely-eyed determinat­ion, while Hiddleston neatly sidesteps giving Will “small town vicar” cliché traits and infuses him

with a thoughtful air.

The show is moody, with lots of picturesqu­e shots of rivers, bridges, cobbleston­e streets, and marshlands in the English countrysid­e. It’s not self-serious, but it also doesn’t have much levity or humor. For those looking for a period drama that feels focused and tightly plotted, this will likely disappoint. But, for viewers who don’t mind a sprawling show that’s odd and unique, with a heavy dose of Victorian-era science and intellect, “The Essex Serpent” delivers.

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 ?? ?? Claire Danes as Cora Seaborne in “The Essex Serpent.” Inset: Tom Hiddleston plays the doubting vicar Will Ransome in the Apple TV+ drama, which unfolds in Victorian-era England.
Claire Danes as Cora Seaborne in “The Essex Serpent.” Inset: Tom Hiddleston plays the doubting vicar Will Ransome in the Apple TV+ drama, which unfolds in Victorian-era England.
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