AMC has become HBO's biggest competitor in recent years in the all-important category of Emmy glory, with multiple award winners Mad Men and Breaking Bad taking the honors that used to belong to The Sopranos. Hell On Wheels escalates the competition, aiming itself directly at HBO's wheelhouse of large-scale historical drama. Specifically, Hell is pretty clearly AMC's version of the late lamented Deadwood. We're once again in the Old West at that moment when the frontier was being pierced by railroads, a time where savage violence and the beginnings of modern American society were balefully co-existing. There's even a stand-in for Ian McShane's epic villain Al Swearengen: Colm Meany as Thomas Durant, a loquacious railway magnate who expounds on his theories about evil and good as he ruthlessly pushes his tracks forward. And our hero Cullen Bohannan (Anson Mount), while not a sheriff like Timothy Olyphant's Seth Bullock, carries a similar don't-mess-with-me vibe.
But this, alas, isn't Deadwood. Which is to say, Hell On Wheels creators Joe and Tony Gayton are very far from being David Milch. (The Gaytons' previous credits include Uncommon Valor and the recent Dwayne Johnson flop Faster.) Instead of filthy, poetic eloquence, we get stretches of clunky expository dialogue; instead of gasp-inducing plot turns, there's a standard story of vengeance. A lot happens in the Hell On Wheels pilot--a couple of murders, a brutal Indian attack on a railroad scouting party--but there's very little in the way of a gripping storyline. The best scene in the entire pilot is the pre-credits teaser, which raises expectations the rest of the show can't match.
Hell On Wheels wants to have monumental sweep (director David Von Ancken, a cable TV vet, provides some lovely landscapes), but there's no narrative vision behind it. Characters are introduced who presumably will have much more to do as the series continues--Common as an ex-slave who won't brook ill treatment, Dominique McElligott as the wife of a railroad surveyor--and given little to make them interesting. The pilot kills off its most interesting figure, and although Mount is a likable lead, he has to work very hard to convince us he has any sort of dark edge. Worse, the show doesn't seem to have anything particularly on its mind regarding the west, or the events surrounding the railroad's arrival: it throws in elements one after another, with no organizing principle in view. The result is busy but uncompelling.
As the producers of Cowboys and Aliens could tell you, westerns are a tough sell. Deadwood itself, however acclaimed, was never one of HBO's most popular shows, and it was cancelled before its time. Hell On Wheels is launching into a very tough timeslot, against the new Homeland on Showtime, the Hung/How To Make It In America duo on HBO, and the new Pan Am on ABC. AMC is giving it their best lead-in, but that's no guarantee people will return after trying the premiere. The show is interesting, hardly a total loss... but the network should really close its deal for more Breaking Bad.
Source: ShowBuzzDaily


This saddens me.....
ReplyDeleteIt does lower my expectations a little bit I guess. I still have relatively high hopes.....
Me too. I've also read some short comments that said it looks incredible, others said it was awful, but this is the only detailed review I found so far and it seems like the writer tried to be as fair and objective as possible.
ReplyDeleteMy hopes are still somewhat high, but I guess it's the first AMC pilot I'm a bit reserved about.
not the most glowing review :(
ReplyDeleteAwww, the review started off as if this was going to be good, but, then it wasn't. I still haven't seen The Killing, but I've loved every other AMC show (even if I do find Mad Men a bit dull and overrated). I'll check it out for the sake of the AMC branding, but I do hope it's good.
ReplyDeleteThe Killing started off excellent, had a few rather mediocre episodes in the middle, but also some really great one. The finale caused quite a bit of controversy, but it wasn't as bad as many people say it was.
ReplyDeleteOne of my main hopes for HoW is that John Shiban joined the show as executive producer after his pilot project 'The Voyage' was rejected by AMC. I'm not sure, but it almost seems like he is the new show runner. At least he was the only producer at the TCA panel. And his resume is quite good - writer and/or producer for shows like Breaking Bad, The X-Files, Torchwood, Star Trek: Enterprise, The Lone Gunmen and also shows I don't watch like Supernatural, The Vampire Diaries and Legend of the Seeker. He had a lot of time to learn from guys like Vince Gilligan and Chris Carter, so I hope he had/has a strong influence.
Here are some additional thoughts on Hell on Wheels' TCA panel that sound a bit more enthusiastic about the show:
ReplyDeletehttp://www.examiner.com/tv-insider-in-los-angeles/amc-s-hell-on-wheels-to-showcase-the-personal-struggle-of-post-civil-war-u-s
I've also seen the pilot and have to disagree completely with this review. This show is beyond compelling and every one of the characters seems loaded with rich stories to tell. Sure it has some similarities to Deadwood, but those are almost completely a result of the genre and historical aspect of the show. It's a very unique pilot as well as a very modern take on the western, I think even more so than Deadwood. I love pretty much all AMC shows but I'm excited that this may be my favorite (even if the rest of the season doesn't quite live up to the pilot, this could blow a lot of shows out of the water. And as for competition with Hung and Pan Am? hilarious.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, it's definitely appreciated!
ReplyDelete