TORCHWOOD: MIRACLE DAY Kicks-Ass - Second Positive Review!

Our second glowing review of Torchwood: Miracle Day, 4.1 which has debuted on Starz network in the U.S., and on BBC in the U.K. next Thursday.

(Our second glowing review of Torchwood: Miracle Day, 4.1 after Chris' review last night)

rating: 4

Torchwood goes international and € Wow. When last we saw Torchwood it was € well, no more. Their headquarters were destroyed, most of the team were dead and Capt. Jack had sacrificed his own grandson to save the rest of The Children of Earth. Wracked with guilt, he became an interstellar hobo and the pregnant Gwen went off the grid with her fella, Rhys. But, if you don€™t know or don€™t remember any of that, it€™s okay, because this is a new beginning. Relocating production to America gives creator Russell T. Davies the chance to start work on a whole new, much bigger, canvas! Most of what you need to know will be told you as we go along. And so we begin - with a celebrity. Bill Pullman (who you probably last saw as the fighter-plane flying President in Independence Day) is, here as Oswald Deans, a convicted paedophile and murderer spending what are intended to be his last few moments on this Earth before receiving the death sentence. Things do not go according to plan and this €“ 6am Kentucky time €“ is our introduction to Miracle Day, a day when nobody dies. Pullman is creepy and twitchy and quite compelling as he argues he should be free because his sentence has been committed and he was executed. It isn€™t his fault nobody can die. This is obviously a plot thread which will become increasingly central as Miracle Day€™s ten episodes unfurl. Russell T. is very good at taking conventions and turning them on their heads and here he has hatched a brilliant variation on the old fable €“ what if something everybody wishes for actually came to pass. The terms and conditions on such deals, of course, always read: €œBe careful what you wish for!€ You know those films €“ like Firefox, The Hunted and Shooter - that begin with a grizzled, battle-weary veteran living the quiet life in the wilds, before a call to adventures comes a-knocking? \Here, the grizzled, battle-weary veteran is Gwen Cooper (Eve Myles) living in a lovely little cottage with Rhys and their daughter, Anwen, in the arse-end of €œGod€™s own€ Wales. Meanwhile, a curious CIA agent €“ Esther Drummond (Alexa Havins) - is worrying about Torchwood, inspired by an email which mysteriously appears out of nowhere. When she begins to dig she is surprised to find there is no reference to Torchwood anywhere. Apart from this blog post, obviously. Mekhi Phifer is Rex Matheson, another CIA agent, who was in an accident, should have died but, thanks to €˜The Miracle€™, didn€™t; giving doctors time to repair him. Not unreasonably, he worries what will happen when €˜The Miracle€™ ends and is determined to learn how it all ties in with the mysterious Torchwood. But what of Captain Jack (John Barrowman)? No Captain Jack, no Torchwood. As always, he and his trusty greatcoat reappear with nary a glance backward at the misery he has left in his wake. He has been drawn back to Earth by that mysterious email. Of course, one of his USPs is that he is immortal. n one occasion, I seem to recall, he spent a couple of thousand years buried in a hole; on another he was buried in liquid concrete. He€™s one tough hombre. Now everyone else is €œundying€ and he, curiously, isn€™t as hard-wearing as he used to be. This suggests that there is some connection between him and Miracle Day, and the email was his invitation back home. By whom and why will, no doubt, become clearer as we proceed. It€™s a shame we didn€™t get to see him travelling the stars, but then, Torchwood has never been about the sexy, space-travelly bits of science fiction adventuring, it€™s always been about the more grounded, grimy consequences. Rhys is, in many ways, the most Torchwoodian character, because he€™s the one who has both feet in the real world. When Gwen decides she wants to break cover and help, his is the voice of common sense and reason, pointing out that people not dying is really not a problem. If only that were true. There are almost off-hand revelations that 300,000 people usually people die a day and another 500,000 are born and, if the not dying continues, it€™ll be four months before the Earth is overwhelmed. Can€™t help but feel that€™s going to become increasingly a problem! I€™m glad to confirm that Davies€™ two years off have not blunted his pen. There is some excellent writing here. He can still turn out a deceptively simple but incredibly powerful line, such as one doctor€™s assertion that €œMiracles got easy€. He is also good at creating memorable set-pieces. There€™s a really icky scene involving a burned victim which zombie movie fans will be talking about that for some time to come, I imagine! The last ten minutes of the episode are the fulfilment of what every Torchwood and Doctor Who fan has been hoping for €“ the same old action/adventure but with a bigger budget and a more glamorous American twist. Yet Davies still approaches his material with his tongue in his cheek €“ there being a lovely visual gag involving ear-muffs amidst the gunfire. But what of the tone? Well, it€™s certainly lighter than Children of Earth, but then so is your average Lars Von Trier film. There was also a Biblical subtext to that series (pillars of fire, voices from the Heavens demanding we sacrifice our children) and I expect there to be a developing subtext here dealing with death and our troubling relationship to it. There is no mention (yet) of Jack€™s rapacious and polymorphous sexuality. I was wondering if that might be eliminated from the Americanised version but, since it€™s co-produced with Starz and they make the absolutely-anything-goes Spartacus, I don€™t think we need fear. This episode is gently easing you in to Davies€™ world and getting all the chess-pieces in place. Next week is when, all being well, the game will begin in earnest. Torchwood: Miracle Day airs on the Starz network today, and on BBC One on Thursday 14th at 9pm.
Writer: Russell T. DaviesDirector: Bharat NalluriStars: John Barrowman, Eve Myles, Mekhi Phifer, Alexa Havins, Bill Pullman
Contributor

John Ashbrook has been publishing half-assed opinions about films, TV shows et al for twenty years now. He's hosted radio shows, taught Film Studies, written books and magazine articles by the cartload and now composes his own film review blog The Cellulord is Watching ... (www.cellulord.co.uk). Of course, what he *really* wants to do is direct.