USA TODAY US Edition

‘Hunters’ finds its way beyond Nazis

- Kelly Lawler Columnist USA TODAY

“Hunters” is always operating at an 11 out of 10.

That’s intentiona­l, as the new Amazon series uses the tropes of 1970s Bmovies and blaxploita­tion films to weave a parable about Nazi hunters finding, torturing and killing the perpetrato­rs of the Holocaust.

It’s a huge meal of a concept to swallow, one that is wildly ambitious if not always fully realized in “Hunters,” starring Al Pacino, executive-produced by Jordan Peele and created by newcomer David Weil (streaming Friday, ★★★☆).

Bold, graphicall­y violent and imperfect, the series tells a story of culture, religion, righteousn­ess and revenge against a backdrop of blood, grief and excruciati­ng pain. It’s jarring and ideologica­lly messy but infinitely watchable.

In the five episodes made available for review (out of a 10-episode first season), it’s not clear what “Hunters” is trying to say about history, the modern resurgence in anti-Semitic violence or, at times, even its own characters. But it is evident that the creators and actors are firing every cannon in their arsenal trying to shout something, and there’s still time to figure out what that is.

Although blessed with the grumbly gravitas of Pacino as its top-billed star, “Hunters” really is about Jonah (Logan Lerman), an underachie­ving teen on the cusp of adulthood in 1977 who lives with his Holocaust-survivor grand

Bold, graphicall­y violent and imperfect, the series tells a story of culture, religion, righteousn­ess and revenge against a backdrop of blood, grief and excruciati­ng pain.

mother in Brooklyn. One night, she is murdered by an intruder Jonah believes is a burglar.

At her memorial, he meets Meyer Offerman (Pacino), a genial, rich patriarch who reveals the truth to Jonah: His grandmothe­r was killed by a Nazi, because she was hunting those hiding in the USA who escaped prosecutio­n after World War II.

Meyer eventually lets Jonah in on his hunt, a systematic search-and-destroy mission for hundreds (perhaps thousands) of Nazis living and thriving in the USA. Meyer has put together a rag-tag team to help him on his quest, including husband-and-wife weapons specialist­s (Saul Rubinek and Carol Kane); an MI-6 operative turned nun (Kate Mulvany); and a buffoonish movie star (Josh Radnor, in yet another role as an insufferab­le egoist).

Their fight is to dismantle an organized ring of Nazis conspiring to bring about a “Fourth Reich” that includes Dylan Baker as a member of President Jimmy Carter’s Cabinet and a young sociopathi­c convert (Greg Austin) who carries out most of the dirty work. FBI Agent Millie Morris (Jerrika Hinton, “Grey’s Anatomy”) investigat­es one of the hunters’ kills, working in parallel to these two extra-government­al forces.

“Hunters” paints with a broad, cartoonish brush. Its Nazi-tracking team is introduced in a fantasy bat mitzvah sequence interlaced with action-movie posters and poses. Its violence is frequent and hard to stomach. The hunters are exacting their poetic justice, and their methods of pain skirt the line of overkill. (In addition to a scene of forcefeedi­ng horse feces, Little Richard’s “Long Tall Sally” is once played so loudly that ears bleed).

Interspers­ed with the mayhem are flashbacks to the Holocaust that include cruelties both expected and nauseating, as if to justify the Nazi hunters’ zeal, but their frequency borders on exploitati­on.

There are times when this brand of hyper-stylized, grindhouse storytelli­ng is directly at odds with the seriousnes­s of the subject matter, and others when the chaos appears to be an apt response to the unspeakabl­e horrors that sparked it. “Hunters” offers a bit of unrealism to capture tragedy so vast it can feel distinctly unreal.

It’s almost a knee-jerk reaction to compare “Hunters” to Quentin Tarantino’s “Inglouriou­s Basterds,” another irreverent story of revenge against the Third Reich. Weil and his directors, who include veterans of slashertin­ged series “American Horror Story” and “Preacher,” pay frequent homage not just to Tarantino but Steven Spielberg, George Lucas and Pacino’s own oeuvre (a “Dog Day Afternoon” reference might make your head spin).

The series is sometimes more interested in its pop culture pastiche than in hunting Nazis: There’s a “Saturday Night Fever” parody, a spirited discussion of Darth Vader’s motives and frequent comic book references. It’s as if the writers were so excited to get the story on screen, they threw in every idea they had, whether or not it belongs in this particular playpen.

But there is a grotesquel­y addictive quality to “Hunters.” Revenge fantasies win that label because it is inherently alluring to see the bad guys get what’s coming to them. “Hunters” delivers on that promise: Pacino chews scenery in an overly exaggerate­d Eastern European accent while gunshots fire, blood spurts and evildoers see their evil undone.

It may not deliver on all cylinders, but there is enough of a spark to keep the car running.

 ??  ?? Al Pacino stars in “Hunters.”
Al Pacino stars in “Hunters.”
 ?? PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R SAUNDERS/AMAZON ?? Pacino and Logan Lerman play Nazi hunters in Amazon’s “Hunters.”
PHOTOS BY CHRISTOPHE­R SAUNDERS/AMAZON Pacino and Logan Lerman play Nazi hunters in Amazon’s “Hunters.”
 ??  ??
 ?? AMAZON ?? Jerrika Hinton plays an FBI agent in “Hunters.”
AMAZON Jerrika Hinton plays an FBI agent in “Hunters.”

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