Peacock’s Last Light Proves that Yes, Even the Apocalypse Can Be Dull
Photo Courtesy of Peacock
There is something irresistible about apocalyptic art in our current epoch, and while we could argue for hours about why that’s the case, it probably comes down to the simple idea that at least some part of us suspects that our own world is ending. Not in any dramatic, sudden way, but by a slow maddening drip, and when you exist in that kind of uncertain, torturous reality, there’s probably something therapeutic about watching a show or reading a book in which the horrific ending comes on fast. It’s like when you dread some future interaction, and part of you is relieved when the day arrives; at least we can get it over with. Apocalypse art gives us that vicarious relief and allows us to experience the hell we think might be coming with a raw kind of immediacy. From the mawkish zombie set pieces of The Walking Dead to the elegant plague narrative of Station Eleven to political upheaval tales like Years and Years, we can do exposure therapy via our television.
All of which means it’s a boom time for end-of-days pieces, and when boom times hit, everybody wants a piece of the action. Which, in turn, means that there will be some duds in the deluge. Last Light, Peacock’s new crack at dystopia, is unfortunately one of these duds. The premise here is that the world’s oil supply has been corrupted, and it’s a good one, borrowed as it is from the novel of the same name by Alex Scarrow. When the oil goes, either by accident or by some nefarious actor, everything stops working, and chaos ensues. Unfortunately, the chaos here is depicted in such sloppy broad strokes, with such lazy characterization and stilted dialogue, that it becomes clear almost immediately that it won’t move you. It won’t even work as a guilty pleasure, because unlike The Walking Dead, there isn’t a solid base of interpersonal drama to this period, no Rick Grimes who we can use as our north star.
The story centers on the Yeats family, and the cliches are never-ending. The dad, Andy (Matthew Fox, in a less-than-triumphant return to the screen), is involved in the oil industry, but his daughter, Laura, is a climate activist (this leads to brutal exchanges like the one in which Andy says, “good luck saving the world” as Laura goes to a climate march, and she shoots back, “good luck destroying it.”) Their son, Sam, is blind and on the verge of potential life-saving surgery when the disaster strikes. Elena, the mom, stays at home to look after him, but is also a dynamic career woman eager to get back to working life—except now she has to roam through the streets of Paris trying to protect her son as everything burns and the people go mad. The minor characters are no better; just a collection of cliches slapped onto a page and embodied by actors who deserve better.