Review: Steven Spielberg-produced âAmerican Gothicâ chokes on its own pretensions
Even after almost 100 years, many questions surround Grant Woodâs iconic painting âAmerican Gothic.â Was it a rural American satire or a paean? A portrait of mourning, small-minded oblivion or agrarian stoicism? Were the two figures a couple or a man and his daughter? And what was with the cathedral gothic windows?
All of which are mysteries far more compelling than the one presented in CBSâ new thereâs-a-serial-killer-among-us series of the same title.
Produced by Steven Spielberg and choking on its own pretensions, Corinne Brinkerhoffâs âAmerican Gothicâ references the masters with the straight-faced, non sequitur regularity of a bad first date â âIs that an original Pollock?â is an actual line from the pilot.
Yet even within the forgiving subgenre of breezy, cheesy summer shows (see also Spielbergâs âUnder the Domeâ), this âAmerican Gothicâ remains strictly paint-by-numbers.
Sorry, but you had to see that one coming.
In Boston (which is really Toronto in a quite obviously not-Boston way), the Hawthorne family (alas, it isnât just paintings that get dragged into this morass of allusions) is gathering to kick off the mayoral campaign of eldest daughter Alison (Juliet Rylance).
Ma and Pa Hawthorne, which is to say Madeline and Mitchell, are played by Virginia Madsen and Jamey Sheridan, but that doesnât help much because they are forced to create the parental climate clash of icy (her) and warm (him) that so many screenwriters believe inevitably results in a tornado of familial dysfunction. (Oh, those controlling mothers!)
Along with the obsessively ambitious Alison (we know sheâs obsessively ambitious because she wants to run for mayor), thereâs Cam (Justin Chatwin), a successful cartoonist/recovering drug addict; Tessa (Megan Ketch), the sweet baby of the family who Just Happens to be married to a detective (Elliot Knight), and an estranged son To Be Named Later.
That would be Garrett (âBansheeâsâ Antony Starr), who, for the last 14 years has apparently been living off the grid, eating squirrels and refusing to shave. But in the early minutes of the pilot, the Hawthornes most certainly donât want to talk about him. They want to explain that while, yes that is an original Pollock, they made it to the top the old fashioned way â by building a concrete empire.
Which is, at this very moment, collapsing to reveal a possible Hawthorne connection to the cityâs most infamous cold case: the Silver Bells killer.
Those individuals blessed with the ability to say the words âSilver Bells killerâ without laughing may be better equipped to enjoy âAmerican Gothic,â though the challenge becomes greater when it is revealed that the bells in question are hand bells.
Yes indeed, in the late 1990s and early aughts, the fictional âBostontoâ was stalked by a serial killer who, unlike any serial killer ever, targeted the cityâs rich and powerful. And, in place of a weapon or the smallest clue, he or she left behind only a silver hand bell.
Because that wouldnât narrow down a serial killer profile. Because bulk purchases of small silver hand bells wouldnât be hard to trace.
Whatever, a tunnel collapses, a clue is revealed and before you can say, âUm, was that tunnel built with Hawthorne concrete?â Mitchellâs in the ICU, Garrett has returned to menace various family members with knowing looks and Cam and Tessa go poking through Dadâs things while doing some math (hey, the killings stopped right around the time Garrett left town; you donât thinkâŚ.).
Meanwhile, it quickly becomes clear that Madeline knows way more than is good for anyone. And I mean, quickly.
On television, unhappy families are far more common and similar in appearance than happy ones, and âAmerican Gothicâsâ most immediate kin is, in fact, the recently departed âThe Family,â down to the immediate draw of the lead actress. Like Joan Allen in âThe Family,â Madsen is a performer of note and great audience sympathy. But she is trapped, as the rest of the cast is trapped, in a story that values cleverness over intelligence or even entertainment; in the first two episodes, only Chatwin is able to break free and then only for a few moments.
But the art references, they just keep on coming, so you might want to have a notebook handy. The pilot, which is titled âArrangement in Grey and Black,â ends with a visual reference to the painting, more commonly known as âWhistlerâs Mother.â The second episode is called âJack-in-the-Pulpit,â which alludes to a moment involving Camâs young son but also, heaven help us, a Georgia OâKeeffe painting; âNighthawksâ is No. 3; âChristinaâs World,â No. 4.
Quickly followed, one assumes, by âThe Scream.â
Oh wait, that was me.
âAmerican Gothicâ
Where: CBS
When: 10 p.m. Wednesday
Rating: TV-14-LSV (may be unsuitable for children under the age of 14 with advisories for coarse language, sex and violence)
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