Real World Trauma Acerbates the flaws
in The Strain Seasons Two and Three
by Kristin Battestella
After
an unraveling end to the First Season of The
Strain, it
took me a long, long while to return to the thirteen episode 2015
Second Season. Childhood flashbacks recounting fairy tales of nobles
with gigantism and quests for the curing blood of a gray wolf start
the year off well. Horrific blood exchanges lead to village children
vanishing in the shadow of the creepy castle before we return to the
present for secret deals with The
Master, alliances with the Ancient Ones, and blind telepathic feeler
vampires canvasing the city. Scientists Ephraim Goodweather (Corey
Stoll) and Nora Martinez (Mia Maestro) contemplate vampire vaccines
while former antique dealer Abraham Setrakian (David Bradley) pursues
a rare strigoi text and rat catcher Fet (Kevin Durand) prepares their
explosive defensive. Government officials like Justine Feraldo
(Samantha Mathis) fight back against the zombie like masses despite
shootouts in infested laboratories, double crosses, and sentient,
disguised as human foot soldiers. Old fashioned black and white
Mexican horror reels add personality and history to our reluctant
heroes while more superb action and flashbacks standout late in the
season with “The Assassin” and “Dead End.” Unfortunately,
early on in Year Two, my main dilemma with the First Season of The
Strain returned–
you
can read all of this, but it is much too much onscreen. Unnecessary
timestamps and location notations clutter reintroduced
characters, new problems, old problems, and unintroduced newcomers.
There are too many separated characters with unbalanced screen time
who must repeatedly explain who they are. Enemy's enemy is my friend
mixed motivations create confusion – multiple people hunting The
Master individually making promises to his fellow ancient vampires
with little background on who these chained monsters chilling beneath
Brooklyn are. Cryptic double talk and real estate transactions may be
filler or meandering developments, but it's a toss up on which one
will drag on or disappear. The past stories are often more
tantalizing because our team isn't much of a team. It took so long in
the First Year to get everyone together, yet each is still toiling
over what to do in this vampire zombie apocalypse. After previous
fears over any tiny contagion, one and all shoot, blast, slice, and
splatter at will. They hand out fliers with the monster details and
warn the community, yet unaware police are shocked to find vampires
in a dark alley.
Maybe
The
Strain is
meant to mirror how no one is on the same page in a crisis – we are
now witnessing that chaotic misinformation mistake first hand indeed
– but the plot is all over the place, too. It's been a few weeks
onscreen since The
Strain began,
however life is upside down for some while others seems totally
unbothered. Again, this is a foreboding parallel to our real life
pandemic with the poor working man much more deeply impacted than the
wealthy ease of access, but here there's no sense of the storytelling
scope despite opportunistic orchestrations and tough women securing
the five boroughs. Slick villains talk of great visions and master
plans, but tangents diverge into a dozen different threads and
multiple dead ends.
Is The
Strain about
a doctor experimenting on the infected to test scientific theories or
weird do nothing telepathic vampires and slow strigoi chases? Are we
to enjoy the precious moments between our little people struggling on
the ground or awe at the zombie outbreak turned vampire mythology?
New people and places are constantly on the move, jumbled by an
aimless, plodding pace as too little too late politicians talk about
quarantines when The
Strain is
past containment. Confusing,
pointless storylines take away from important intrigues and
significant elements tread tires amid random threats and dropped
crises. The conflicts on cruel science for the greater good grow
hollow thanks to constant interruptions and changed emotions.
Provocative diluted worm extracts taken for illness or ailments are
used as control by the strigoi or when necessary for our heroes, but
the scientific analysis of such a tonic or hybrid cases is never
considered. Infecting the infected experiments and vampire free
island security only take a few episodes, yet viewers today who can't
pay the rent are expected to believe it takes weeks for a market free
fall and runs on banks? “The Born” starts off great, but often
there's no going back to what happens next regarding cures and Roman
history as contrived messy or blasé action pads episodes. Rather
than driving away in a cop car, dumbed down characters run into a
church for a lagging, maze-like battle that kills an interesting
minority character. When the community comes together for “The
Battle for Red Hook,” unnecessary family pursuits ruin the sense of
immediacy while the hop, skip, and jump to Washington D.C. for two
episodes of scientific effort gets ditched for glossed over vampire
factions and historic relics. Both the lore and science are
interesting, but these mashed together entities compete for time as
if we're changing the channels and watching two shows at once.
Instead of the rich detail we crave, The
Strain continually
returns to its weakest plot with shit actions and stupid players
causing absurd consequences.
The
Strain, however,
does look good, and the ten episode Third Season provides coffins,
gore, goo, and nasty bloodsucking appendages. The vampire makeup,
creepy eyes, monster sinews, and icky skin are well done.
Occasionally, creatures scaling the wall and speedy, en masse action
is noticeable CGI, but the worms, tentacles, and splatter upset the
body sacred. Sickly green lighting invokes the zombie plague mood
while choice red add vampire touches alongside silver grenades,
ultraviolet light, and ancient texts. Sadly, Season Three opens with
an unrealistic
announcement that it's only been twenty-three days since the outbreak
started. The uneven pace makes such time impossible to believe, and
tricked out infrared military are just now arriving three weeks into
the disaster. Although, I spent February marathoning The
Strain, and
it is beyond depressing – nay downright infuriating – to see how
our current administration did not heed epidemic warnings, responding
terribly to the Coronavirus outbreak with red tape and lack of
resources.
Mass manufacture of The
Strain's bio-weapon
is also never mentioned again as the science is now nothing more than
a home chemistry set. Instead, step
by step time is taken to siphon gas in a dark, dangerous parking
garage – which could be realistic except The
Strain has
never otherwise addressed food, supplies, precious toilet paper, or
the magically unlimited
amount of silver bullets. Once again, everyone who fought together
goes on to separate allegiances on top of hear tell global spread,
Nazi parallels, control centers, and messianic symbolism. It's all
too clunky thanks to people made stupid and contradictions between
the onscreen myths, technology, and abilities. Too many convenient
infections, Master transformations, tacked on worms, and excuses
happen at once – cheapening Shakespearean touches and monster worm
bombs with redundant failures. Montages wax on human history while
voiceovers tell audiences about government collapse, glossing over
arguably the most interesting part of the catastrophe for drawn out
experiments on microwaves. There's no narrative flow as the episodes
run out but suddenly everyone is sober enough to use the ancient
guidebook to their advantage. After such insistence over sunlight and
ultraviolet, those safeguards are inexplicably absent when needed. No
one maximizes resources and opportunities in “Battle for Central
Park,” and people only come together because they accidentally bump
into each other. In “The Fall,” a carefully orchestrated trap and
prison plan is finally put into action against The Master, but
ridiculous contrivances stall the operation before easy outs and one
little effing asshole moron ruining it all. Again.
The
cast is not at fault for the uneven developments on The
Strain, but
if Ephraim
Goodweather is only there to be a drunken bad parent failing at every
turn, he should have been written off the show. If we're sticking
with Eph and his angst before science, then his pointless strigoi
wife and terrible son Zach should have been tossed instead of hogging
the screen. Cranky,
obnoxious, budding sociopath Zach's
“Why? No! Don't!” lack of comprehension is unrealistic for his
age, and everything has to be dumbed downed to appease him. Maybe
quarantined parents can now can relate to this scenario, but onscreen
The
Strain is
continually talking down to viewers like we are five and it gets old
very
fast.
Previously compassionate characters are reset as cold marksmen, and
Eph claims he no longer cares about the cause when he was once at its
epicenter. He complains he has nothing to do, bemoaning the lack of a
feasible vaccine before gaining government support in creating a
strigoi bio-weapon only to ditch it for microwaves and vampire
telepathy. Zach ruins each plan anyway, and by
the end of Season Two, I was fast forwarding over the Goodweather
family plots. Nora Martinez is also nonexistent as a doctor unless
convenient, relegated instead to babysitting, and Samantha Mathis'
(Little
Women) Justine
Feraldo likewise starts off brassy before unnecessarily overplaying
her hand and failing bitterly because of others. Initially The
Strain had
such a diverse ensemble, but by the end of the Third Season, all the
worst things have happened to the women and minorities. Ruta
Gedmintas' Dutch wavers from the cause for a conflicted lesbian
romance that disappears before she returns to the fold as Eph's
tantalizing research assistant when she's not being captured and
rescued. I
won't lie, I only hung on watching The
Strain as
long as I did for Rupert Penry-Jones (MI-5)
as the thousand year old hybrid Quinlan. He uses his conflicted
history with The Master to help Setrakian and sees through Ephraim
while developing a distrustful shoulder to shoulder with Fet.
Unfortunately, his vampire super powers come in handy unless he's
forgotten about when it's time for the action to sour or let failures
happen, and nobody tells officials about this almost invincible
half-strigoi who could be useful in a fight. Setrakian,
Quinlan, and Fet make for an ornery, begrudging trio, living in a
luxury hotel while pursuing Abraham's relics whether they agree with
the plan or not – mostly because Fet accrues all manor of weapons
and is happy to use them. Setrakian has some crusty wisdom for them,
but his battle of wits with Jonathan Hyde as the at any price Palmer
provides great one on one scene chewing. The double crosses and
interchangeable threats feel empty, and Palmer also has an odd
romantic side plot that wastes time, but Richard Sammel's Nazi
vampire Eicchorst remains a deliciously twisted minion. “Dead End”
and “Do or Die” reveal more personal history as the mature
players provide intriguing questions on immortality, humanity, and
barbarism. Miguel Gomez' Gus finally seems like he is going to join
the team, but then he's inexplicably back on his own rescuing
families and refusing to accept his mother's turn in more useless
filler. He and Joaquin Cosio (Quantum
of Solace)
as the absolutely underutilized fifties superhero Angel are
conscripted to fight vampires but once again, they remain wasted in
isolated, contrived detours.
Streamlining
Fet, Dutch, Quinlan, and Gus as vampire fighters testing methods from
Setrakian's texts and Eph's science funded by Feraldo could have
unified The
Strain with
straightforward heroes versus monsters action we can root for in an
apocalypse. Watching
on the eve of our own real world pandemic, was I in the right frame
of mind to view The
Strain unclouded?
Thanks to creators Guillermo de Toro and Chuck Hogan and showrunner
Carlton Cuse's foretelling social breakdowns between the haves and
the have nots, maybe not. That said, The
Strain terribly
executes two seasons worth of source material. An embarrassment
of riches with a scientific premise, mystical flashbacks, assorted
zombie and vampire crossover monsters, and intriguing characters fall
prey to uneven pacing, crowded focus, and no balance or
self-awareness onscreen. The
Strain may
have been better served as television movies or six episode elemental
seasons – science
in year one, vampire history the second, relic pursuits, and a final
battle. Disastrous characters and worthless stories compromise the
meaty sacrifices, crusty old alliances, and silver standoffs –
stretching the horror quality thin even in a shorter ten episode
season. Rather than a fulfilling mirror to nature parable, The
Strain Seasons
Two and Three are an exercise in frustration,
and even without the real world horrors, it's too disappointing to
bother with the end of the world reset in Season Four.
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