![]() Led by Caroline Quentin’s brilliant, M-like Wes, alongside Archie and Rudi Dharmalingam’s embittered reset vet Shiv – a real standout amidst an ensemble that includes Brian Gleeson and Vinette Robinson on top form – George soon finds himself taking part in slickly-handled high-speed car chases through exotic European locales, saving the world like a regular 007. With exposition duly dumped, George is invited to join Lazarus and help take down former agent Rebrov (a characteristically captivating Tom Burke), whose nuclear designs bely a motivation for destruction that’s grounded in profound trauma, sensitively unpacked by Barton over the series’ course. A montage in the third episode poetically evokes the layered repercussions of each reset, masterfully recontextualising entire character arcs as the more nightmarish potentialities of continuous time loops are explored.īarton picks at the difference between personal happiness and the “greater good” like a societal scab. It may sound a bit headachey, but it keeps the series’ multiple timelines tightly focused, and thanks to Barton’s largely jargon-free writing, consistently slick editing work, and some generous timestamp deployment, it never feels overwhelming: if anything, it helps keep the show’s character-driven storytelling front and centre. The wrinkle here then is that this singularity is less a time machine, more a video game checkpoint – travellers can only travel back to the most recent 1 July, with the save-point pushing humanity forwards a year when each 30 June passes. On his umpteenth loop, George is approached by the mysterious Archie (a poised Anjli Mohindra), who explains that she’s part of The Lazarus Project, a secret organisation of time travellers – think the clinical cool of Spooks’ MI5 crew crossed with the sci-fi bent of the Torchwood team – who exploit a space singularity (“Unless you have a degree in quantum physics, don’t ask,” she quips) to prevent extinction-level threats. Each reset only drives George’s loved ones further away as his desperation to be believed increases. ![]() Background news and radio chatter about a potential new Mers pandemic, financial crises, and Eastern European nuclear tensions lend proceedings an underlying foreboding (eerily, Barton wrote this six years ago), and things soon take a grim turn for George and his family as Sarah comes down with the virus.īut then George wakes up and it’s 1 July 2022 again, the last six months of his life playing out in a kind of post-COVID Groundhog Day loop. We meet app dev George ( Paapa Essiedu) on 1 July 2022, and watch as a whirlwind six months – played out in an almost Up-esque opening montage – see him secure a big business loan, get hitched to girlfriend Sarah (Charly Clive), and prepare for imminent fatherhood. But if you really could travel back in time, what would it cost you? Would you be willing to pay it? And if you could, does that mean you should? These are the questions at the heart of The Lazarus Project, from Giri/Haji writer Joe Barton – a taut eight-part sci-fi thriller that’s as big on emotion as it is on timey-wimey shenanigans and high octane action. The idea of turning back the clocks is especially tantalising in times of crisis. With the world’s current chaotic state leaving many wondering where it all went wrong, it’s unsurprising that recent temporally-tricksy offerings like Tenet, Palm Springs, and Life After Life have captured viewers’ imaginations.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |