A trawl through TV SFF series and serials available on DVD
pulled up a dozen that looked interesting enough to try, and the US/Canadian
production The Dead Zone ("based
on characters" from Stephen King's 1979 novel of the same name) was the
first one to drop through my letter box. This lasted for six seasons with 80
episodes made, but (as so often seems to be the case) was cancelled without
reaching a proper conclusion. In this particular instance it probably doesn't
matter too much, in that the basic plot is quite open-ended with each episode
largely self-contained and without any prospect of some dramatic conclusion
solving an edge-of-the-seat mystery.
The setting is a small town in the present-day USA. Johnny
Smith (Anthony Michael Hall) is a teacher who spends six years in a coma with
major brain damage after a car crash, before making an unexpected recovery. He
discovers that his brain has rewired itself and he now has psychic abilities;
making physical contact with people is sufficient to tell him a lot about them,
including things they don't know themselves, from their past, present or
future. He also discovers that his pregnant fiancee Sarah (Nicole de Boer), having
been told that Johnny had no hope of recovery, married another man – the local
sheriff (Chris Bruno). Johnny gets involved in solving crimes and preventing
deaths, attracting growing media attention, especially from a local journalist
(Kristen Dalton).
I've seen all of the first season, and I'm quite impressed.
The script is intelligent and the lead character's problems complex and
difficult enough to engage adults, not just adolescents (as seems so often the
case today). The first three episodes
form one continuous story of Johnny's recovery, the discovery of his abilities
and the rapidly growing interest of the news media. The focus then switches away from this to
individual cases he deals with (some of them seeming rather trivial), though
returns to the main story line from time to time. So far I'm finding it
sufficiently absorbing to keep watching it, although I suspect I'll lose
interest long before the end. Time will tell.
2 comments:
Obviously the TV series doesn't follow the novel.
It sounds similar to a number of other TV shows in which the hero somehow gets advance warning of a future crime and spends the episode trying to prevent it. _Person of Interest_ is the latest incarnation, I think. I also remember another one in which the hero got tomorrow's newspaper every morning.
Person of Interest is one of my favourites, largely because of the dry humour which underlies the relationship between the two protagonists.
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