Article first published as TV Review: SALVATION on Seat42F.
CBS has a new summer drama premiering
tonight, SALVATION. Humanity is only six months away from being wiped
out by an asteroid impact, but almost nobody knows it. When MIT grad
student Liam Cole brings the event to the attention of billionaire
inventor Darius Tanz, Tanz rushes to the Pentagon to assist in a plan to
stop it. Deputy Secretary of Defense, Harris Edwards, assures them that
it’s already under control, but he’s definitely lying, even to his
inappropriate sweetheart, an employee under him, Pentagon Press
Secretary Grace Barrows. Can Tanz and Cole save mankind without the
government’s help?
CBS likes to do light science fiction
fare in the summer, and SALVATION is no different. Like The Dome or Zoo,
it involves a disaster, though this one is a bit less mysterious, and a
couple of heroes that must save everyone because, apparently, they are
the only ones capable of doing so. It’s like a popcorn action movie
spread out over ten to thirteen episodes, with only superficial or
generic characters development amid the emergency that the focus is on.
It would not be a bad concept to do in the 1990s. In the middle of Peak
TV, shows like this are likely to be ignored, not enough quality present
to compete with year-round great series.
The biggest thing the show has going for
it at the outset is casting Jennifer Finnigan (Tyrant, Close to Home)
as Grace. Finnigan is a fun actress who I have enjoyed in many projects
previously, and was the biggest reason I had hope for this show. Her
primary story is a predictable, though. She’s at the verge of changing
careers so she can be with Edwards (Ian Anthony Dale, Hawaii Five-0),
but then learns he is keeping secrets from her, casting her decisions in
doubt. Another subplot involving her daughter works for the emotional
heft needed in episode one, but doesn’t seem to have legs. I hope she is
better used going forward, but there’s just not enough meat for
Finnigan in the pilot.
The male leads, Santiago Cabrera
(Heroes, The Musketeers) as Tanz and Charlie Rowe (Red Band Society) as
Liam, aren’t bad, but neither are they magnetic. Instead, they seem to
be relatively stock characters themselves, with their complexity coming
straight out of a dozen other stories featuring leads that are
strikingly similar.
Somewhat interestingly, Liam begins a
romance with an aspiring science fiction author, Jillian (Jacqueline
Byers, Roadies), just before things get started. If the relationship
weren’t so rushed and stereotypical, I might be more interested in how
fiction will clash with reality, which is an avenue worth exploring.
Provided, of course, SALVATION doesn’t go the Castle route and just make
it ridiculously unrealistic, ignoring the actual possibilities of such a
plot. (I maintain Castle worked because of Nathan Fillion; anyone else
would have struggled to make it watchable.)
I don’t dislike Salvation.
As someone that enjoys the genre, I am tempted to watch. The problem
is, there needs to be some hook besides the general premise. For
instance, last year’s BrainDead was quirky and charming, with great
musical recaps at the beginning of each episode, plenty to keep me
hooked through the whole single-season run. SALVATION seems to lack
that.
In short, there’s a compelling storyline
in here somewhere, and there are even some intriguing elements to
SALVATION that could make it must-see for sci-fi fans. However, it seems
underdeveloped, its characters superficial, which is disappointingly
as-predicted for broadcast network summer fare. If CBS would just take
the season a little more seriously, get some heft behind a project like
this, they would be back in competition with the superior cable
networks. But it’s clear already that SALVATION is not going to be the
vehicle to do that.
SALVATION premieres tonight at 9/8c.
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