Hellblazer is a series that has always
been held dear to my heart. I've got the first 5 or 6 trade
collections of the comic, and a few later volumes. One day, I'll get
around to picking up all the collections, but it has been a rather
long-running series. It'll take a while. In the meantime, there's
been the occasional adaptation that's cropped up. There was a film
about a dark-haired and dark-coated American man named John
Constantine that had some rather good points to it (save the presence
of Shia LeBouf, whom I maintain there has not yet been built a bus
large enough to properly run over), but was certainly no Hellblazer
film. I even made a valiant effort to play through the terrible
licensed game that was made said film. Rumour has it Castiel from Supernatural was originally supposed to be John Constantine, but
licensing fell through, and we got Misha's charming rogue Angel
instead.
Now in the interests of plausible
deniability, I'd like to say that while I am aware of the
leaked pilot floating around the internet, I certainly haven't
seen it, as that would imply some less-than-legal and certainly
immoral ways and means, and I would never ever ever
partake in such activities. Just so we're clear. Officially, anything
I discuss here has been gleaned from various publicly available video
clips and discussions. Honest. If you get my drift.
Walked right off the pages, he has. |
The other characters are a mixed bag. Chas returns, Constantines hapless but faithful friend. He's American now, like he was in the film, but is portrayed by a gruff, bearded Charles Halford instead of the aforementioned (and afore-cursed) Shia. Visually and performance-wise, he hits the mark so well you don't even miss the original nationality. His omnipresent taxi cab is back, but this time it's a classic 50s Chevy instead of the London Black. Again, much more suitable than a 90s Caprice. The cast is rounded out by the angel Manny, played with a menacing charm by Harold Perrineau, and Lucy Griffiths as Liv. Manny's a fantastic character, but I was sadly disappointed by Liv. I have fond memories of Lucy Griffiths in the BBC's cheesy Robin Hood series, but she just falls flat here. Fortunately, I hear there's recasting afoot, and someone will be taking her place, but playing existing character Zed instead, opening up the possibility of an adaptation of the Damnation Army arc from the books.
The show has a very interesting feel, a
mix between more modern exorcism/possession films and higher-quality
horror/adventure shows. The special effects are low-key but
believable, with what appear to be a lot of practical effects. Lots
of shouting in cod-Latin, as you'd expect from pulp horror. The
setting was in interesting choice, being not New York or Los
Angeles as you'd expect, but Atlanta of all places. Always knew there
was something weird about Atlanta. Due to this (and I mean this in
nicest possible way) I half expected to see a Winchester brother
wander past in the background. The pacing was a bit odd, and the
story didn't flow terribly well, but that's something you'd expect
from a pilot episode, and doesn't worry me. Sherlock, for example,
has a frankly amateurish pilot episode compared to its premiere.
Overall, I have high hopes for this adaptation, based on the very limited materials I've seen of it so far, having totally not seen the actual leaked pilot episode. It's certainly better than previous adaptations of Hellblazer that I've seen, and I'm encouraged that Matt Ryan really feels like he understands the character. I honestly thing even my pick, Marc Warren, wouldn't have been better for the role. I've got a feeling this could, if properly handled, be at least as good as DC's other successful television property, Arrow.
And yes, that was Dr Fate's helmet. I have to go squee now.
Overall, I have high hopes for this adaptation, based on the very limited materials I've seen of it so far, having totally not seen the actual leaked pilot episode. It's certainly better than previous adaptations of Hellblazer that I've seen, and I'm encouraged that Matt Ryan really feels like he understands the character. I honestly thing even my pick, Marc Warren, wouldn't have been better for the role. I've got a feeling this could, if properly handled, be at least as good as DC's other successful television property, Arrow.
And yes, that was Dr Fate's helmet. I have to go squee now.
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