It has several things going for it, number one by a long mile being Kevin Bacon. Despite his fame and his extensive filmography, it seems to me that he is still thought of as a "reliable" actor whereas I think he deserves more kudos than that. He suffers a bit from the problem that plagued Alec Baldwin until Tina Fey rescued him - that of character actor trapped in a handsome man's body. Bacon not only holds the screen like the best stars do, but he imbues his character, Ryan Hardy, with the right amount of weariness and wariness called for in a former FBI agent with a drinking problem and a pacemaker - both the result of surviving an attack by the serial killer he caught and sent to prison years earlier.
Said serial killer, a former English professor and Edgar Allen Poe enthusiast, has escaped and is out to finish off his last victim, a lovely young woman who barely survived her attack.
The tone of the show is moody, tense and gripping - all pluses. It is also extremely, profoundly violent. And, as usual, most of that violence is directed towards women. Yes, in this particular episode we see several male cops and security guards killed but they are background to the main event - the torture and subsequent display of a woman's mutilated body.
When LAW & ORDER: SVU first began airing, I watched it. By that time the LAW & ORDER franchise felt like comfort food. SVU was a bit harder to stomach since the crimes were sexual in nature, but I managed to hang in there for a while. It was never appointment TV for me, but I could curl up to it on a Friday night if nothing else called to me. But eventually I couldn't watch it anymore. In order to remain in the cultural zietgeist and on the ratings radar, they pushed the envelope further and further, the crimes becoming more gruesome, the bodies bloodier and violated in astonishingly sick new ways. And, you guessed it, most of this violence was done to women.
Now comes THE FOLLOWING and sure enough, the serial killer in question here murdered 14 women, gouging out their eyes in the process. The visuals provided to the audience are disturbing to say the very least, not to mention the scene that takes place in a basement full of dismembered dogs. Viewers are also
I can understand the appeal of a show about a serial killer. They fascinate us - how does such a human being go so wrong? What motivates them? Why, really, is the question we want answered. But my guess is that this show will not even remotely attempt to answer those questions as it will be far more concerned with luring viewers in each week with greater violence, more graphic footage and almost all of it footage of women in the process of or shortly after being hunted, caught, raped, tortured and dismembered.
Enough. Enough of this fetish, please.
Violence can be shown in film, on television and in plays in a way that does not glorify it or make it "sexy" (in tv development exec parlance). My fear is that this show - as well acted as it is - will be one that uses violence with no awareness at all - no awareness of its tacit glorification.
To DVR or Not To DVR? I think I answered my own question.