The Columbus Dispatch

Time never stands still in ‘Cruel Summer’

- Bill Goodykoont­z

The shortest distance between two points is a straight line – that’s both a handy thing to know and something “Cruel Summer” ignores completely.

Instead, the show, of which Jessica Biel is an executive producer, takes the long way around to tell the story of the mystery of a teenage girl’s abduction, and the possible involvemen­t of another girl. It’s tempting to say it’s more complicate­d than that, and it kind of is – on purpose. Sometimes that’s fun, sometimes it’s maddening. Always, it’s odd and keeps you guessing, which isn’t the worst thing in the world for a crime story.

Most of the action, we’re told at the outset of each episode (at least the two provided by critics) takes place on June 26 of 1993, 1994 and 1995. Viewers quickly learn how things will work with a birthday wake-up scene from each year that opens the first episode.

What to expect

In 1993, Jeanette (Chiara Aurelia) is awakened by her father Greg (Michael Landes) in an annual ritual. Things are different in 1994 – Jeanette has lost her glasses and braces and a boy (!) wakes her up. In 1995, things are dark. Literally. The scene is shot more darkly, and Greg wakes Jeanette (now with chopped dark hair and a scowl) not with a sweet happy birthday, but with the announceme­nt that “Your lawyer is here.” “Which one?” Jeanette replies. OK then.

A lot can change in three years, especially when you’re in high school. Especially this high school. Especially for Jeanette. In 1993, she’s a self-described nerd. In 1994, she’s popular and running with the in-crowd. In 1995, she is, as she puts it, the most-hated person in the nation.

Spoilers? Nah. There’s nothing here you can’t learn in the trailer. But secrets abound.

The first episode charts, however circuitous­ly, Jeanette’s evolution, if you can call it that. The story bounces back and forth between the three years, revealing informatio­n bit by bit. Never too much – this is a series, not a movie, so details are meted out with care.

Helpfully, Jeanette looks so different from year to year that you always know what year you’re seeing.

In 1993, she and her friends Vince (Allius Barnes) and Mallory (Harley Quinn Smith) head for the mall. While they’re goofing around trying to talk Vince out of dragging them to see “Jurassic Park” yet another time, Jeanette spots Kate (Olivia Holt). Awkward and unsure of herself, Jeanette giggles a greeting and tell Kate it’s her birthday.

Kate kind of, sort of, knows who Jeanette is and wishes her a happy birthday.

Then things change. Kate goes missing (again, informatio­n you can glean from the trailer). How? Why? And what happens that makes, thanks to national newsmagazi­ne interviews, Jeanette public enemy No. 1?

Patience is a virtue. That’s another handy thing to know, and something “Cruel Summer” requires.

Andrea Anders chews scenery

The second episode deals with Kate’s story. She’s perched firmly atop the school’s social heap, with a dream boyfriend (Froy Gutierrez) and an overbearin­g, gold-digging mother (Andrea Anders, in a bright spot of scenery chewing). The episode is centered around an annual garden party, the shallow, know-yourplace kind of thing Kate’s mom lives for.

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