Wednesday 5 July 2017

Preacher - 'On the Road', 'Mumbai Sky Tower' and 'Damsels'

With American Gods wrapped up, Amazon fills the 'neo-mythic American road movie weirdly heavy on British acting talent' slot with the return of Preacher, which readers may recall as the slow-building story of a preacher with a dark past receiving a superpower of dubious origin and trying to save his town.
 
"Are we there yet?"
This season ain't like that.

Aside from anything else, the town of Annville was destroyed in the finale of Season 1, in large part thanks to the despair caused by Jesse Custer's failed attempt to get God on the phone. We open therefore with the aptly titled 'On the Road', in which we find Jesse, Tulip O'Hare and Cassidy embarking on their epic road trip to find God, as yet ignorant of the fate of Annville. Almost immediately, they are side-tracked by a police chase in grainy, grindhouse contrast to the tune of 'Come on Eileen'; because of course they are. Jesse uses the Word to disable the police, but then the literal cowboy from Hell shows up, blowing cops to red mist from a mile away.
 
"This sort of thing happens to us a lot lately."
Jesse takes the gang to visit an old religious contact. Mike, a stern preacher who locks his parishioners in a covered cage to help them deal with their addictions, has a weird and eclectic body of esoteric knowledge, and I'm looking forward to learning how he acquired it. He shows no surprise that god is missing, and sends them to a lapdance club, the owner of which professed to have met God. This key witness is killed by a stray gunshot when Cassidy gets into a fight after touching one of the dancers, but tells them that God didn't come for the girls; he came for the jazz.

Meanwhile, Mike is confronted by the cowboy, whom he knows – as do we, thanks to one of Preacher's trademarked whole-screen captions with accompanying hate-filled musical sting – to be THE SAINT OF KILLERS. Mike acknowledges that the Saint could force him to say where Jesse has gone, but stabs himself in the heart to keep that from happening. I guess we'll never know where he came by his knowledge.
 
Boom.
The Saint catches up with the gang and shrugs off the Word, as well as the assembled bullets and grenades of an adjacent not-the-NRA rally, and our protagonists flee another massacre to the 'Mumbai Sky Tower', hoping to get some answers from Fiore, who is shown in a short montage to have come to the titular casino resort to try to kill himself, only to be defied by his angelic nature until, finally, coming back from the dead becomes a career in which he is murdered on stage over and over again. He reveals that he and the late deBlanc hired the Saint, and his contempt when Jesse threatens him with the Word tips Jesse off that this is how the Saint is tracking him.

This series is weird, but good.
Having now learned – in an unexpectedly emotional scene – that Annville is gone, Jesse and Tulip contemplate marriage. Tulip, however, is reminded by a chance encounter(1) that she has problems of her own, in particular a crime boss named Victor. This prompts her to reject the cosy notion of forging a family with Jesse. Meanwhile, Cassidy is given two hours forty-five minutes to talk Fiore around, which he does in another montage, this one of a riotous drugs bender. Cassidy persuades Fiore to call off the Saint, only for Jesse to fuck it up by refusing to give up the Word. To call the Saint, he orders Fiore to 'find peace', which they angel does by engaging the Saint to kill him while keeping him on Jesse's trail(2).

Next stop is New Orleans, which Tulip is less than happy about, but seems the logical place for God to find jazz.
 
It's that man again.
And so to 'Damsels', which opens with Eugene being called to his best friend's side and talking her out of suicide, only for her to try to go through with it – after he burns the suicide note – because he mistakes her intent and tries to kiss her. This is the tragedy of Eugene, and of course Tracey's failed suicide attempt and his own are being replayed to him in HELL(3), just as the Saint's bloody deeds were. However, something goes wrong and the punishment projector fails, leaving Eugene alone in a little grey cell.

Oh, and we also get opening credits, having missed those for a couple of weeks. Not sure what that's all about.

...
In New Orleans, Jesse seeks for God, but after a disappointment involving a woman and a man in a Dalmatian costume, Tulip cries off and Cassidy takes her to stay with his old mate, a francophone named Denis who clearly detests Cassidy. Jesse gets a lead, a singer, only for her to be abducted by men in white. He rescues her and gets another lead, although it turns out that she was working with the men in white to confirm that the Word exists, and now kicks Jesse upstairs to 'Samson Team', and their terrifying, one-eyed leader. He also gets hella ratty with Tulip on the phone, prompting her to take a walk, apparently with the deliberate intention of getting recognised and picked up by Victor's men.

And in Hell, Eugene finds his door is open, and goes out into a corridor. He sees another man out of his cell, who may in fact be Hitler, and hears other doors opening.

"Perhaps you know my work?"
Season 2 is a massive change of pace, but retains the mix of humour, gore and pathos that made the first season so successful. The motel massacre at the start of episode 2 is an insane tour de force of splatter, while every scene with Fiore is melancholy and moving in one way or another. It is also rewarding to see the characters finally learn about Annville and be dumbstruck, even in the midst of a firefight. It makes the first season and its sprawling cast of characters seem like less of a throwaway.

Although the more trigger-happy of the two, Tulip proves to be the moral core of her relationship with Jesse, especially as regards the Word, and Jesse's insensitivity to her troubles – however minor compared to 'God is missing' – reminds us that he can frankly be a bit of a dick sometimes. A lot of the time, in fact. In a series about a struggling preacher literally looking for God, it's the career criminal and the anarchic vampire who provide the moral and spiritual backbone.

Eugene and Tracey have a very cinematic tragedy, but it's hard not to feel for them both. In a more conventional narrative I'm sure we'd be supposed to sympathise more with friendzoned Eugene, and maybe it's just perception that steers me away from that, but I see in that scene a boy misled by his own hopes and society's false promises, and a girl who breaks when the one peer in the world whom she thought didn't see her as a prize or a rival proved otherwise. Their story was heartbreaking without details, and it's heartbreaking with.

(1) Ending, as so many encounters do in Preacher, with her having to kill someone.
(2) I have zero doubts that Jesse will blame Cassidy when the Saint next turns up.

(3) Thanks, hyper-aggressive captions!

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