The Eleventh Hour...
Oct. 13th, 2008 08:13 amI'm so happy to have found a new show I love. On the strength of the first episode, anyway. That's The Eleventh Hour, "Resurrection". I watched it primarily because I have been a fan of Rufus Sewell since I first saw him ride onscreen as Fortinbras in Branagh's Hamlet.
And here he's playing an American. Who'd have guessed?
What I loved most about the story (besides intelligent, suspenseful writing and an interesting plot) was that Rufus Sewell plays a genius who is not dysfunctional in any way I could see. He isn't quirky, antisocial, or rude. He may have his flaws (and no doubt we'll get to see them) but he's smart, insightful, kind, brave, and even wise. Humanist values that matter to him. A heroic hero - I love the concept. A genius who isn't crazy - I love it even more.
( And he's worth looking at. )
Other thoughts: The show kept reminding me of other shows, in good ways rather than derivative ways.
- The styles of Dr. Jacob Hood (Sewell) and his bodyguard/partner Rachel Young (Marley Shelton) reminded me of Mulder and Scully in the prfessional dynamic and the way she dresses.
- Her visual style reminded me of Rebecca Locke in The Inside, definitely not a bad thing, though I don't find either of them particularly compelling in looks - just interesting. I like it that she's the fighter, he's thinker; and that she's the type that thugs would underestimate.
- The plot seemed to me more like Century City than X-Files, in that it relied on a scientific-style crime and new scientific advances rather than spookiness and weirdness.
- I really liked the cop on the murder case. I thought his name was McNeill but it seems to be (from IMDb) Officer McEachern, played by Andrew Hedge. He reminded me both of James Spader in The Watcher (though
maaseru didn't see it) and Crewes' new boss Captain Tidwell on Life.
Bring on the second episode!