![]() ![]() Mark Blankenship has been writing about arts and culture for twenty years, with bylines in The New York Times, Variety, Vulture, Fortune, and many others. The Power premieres March 31 on Prime Video. This is going to be a sci-fi show where the female characters are guaranteed to take top billing. And oh yeah, there are also some men, including John Leguizamo, Josh Charles, and Ted Lasso’s Toheeb Jimoh in a crucial role as a photographer who realizes that certain women are turning to the dark side. For another, the showrunner is Raelle Tucker, whose work on True Blood saw that series blend meaty ideas with sex, gore, and humor.Īlong with Collette, the cast includes Auli’i Cravalho ( Moana) and newcomer Halle Bush. For one thing, Reed Morano is directing several episodes, and her work on The Handmaid’s Tale helped that show’s first season develop its incisive approach to feminist storytelling. It’s that sly mix of action-adventure tropes and vicious commentary that has made the book an award-winning bestseller.Ĭhances are good the series will be just as layered. In the final chapters, the novel becomes a thorny, provocative argument about how anyone can be a fascist or a dictator, if they just get the opportunity. In the book, grown women develop the power as well, and while they initially use it to shake off male oppression, many of them become corrupted by their unstoppable might. It’s a wild rush of sensation that evokes how it might feel for every girl on earth to realize she’s got the ability to change the world.īut it’s not that simple: This series is based on Naomi Alderman’s novel The Power, and if it follows the original story, then it’s going to take some nasty turns. Over a thundering dance beat, there are also scenes of “sexy chaos,” like a slow-mo shot of a woman in a high-fashion dress walking a miniature horse through a palace, then later forcing a general to kneel down and kiss her hand. There are scenes of young women hurling lightning bolts at cars, short circuiting a school fire alarm to get out of class, and moodily watching sparks dart between their fingers. Playing the mayor of Seattle, Toni Collette goes on TV to insist that’s not a hoax, but we don’t have to take her word for it. The trailer for Prime Video’s The Power goes hard on the show's high-concept premise, about all the teenage girls in the world simultaneously developing the ability to conduct electricity through their hands. It’s all fun and games until somebody uses their superpowers to start a violent revolution. ![]()
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