Mob City: A Walking Dead Reunion in the City of Angels
When Frank Darabont first met Jon Bernthal, he knew if he ever did a noir project, Bernthal would be his leading man.
“He’s got this tremendous quiet masculinity,” Darabont said recently in a conference call with reporters. “It’s not forced. It’s not show-boaty. It’s quiet and it’s genuine, and it feels like such a throwback to Robert Mitchum and John Garfield, an earlier era of actor.”
So when Darabont began writing Mob City, a series steeped in noir, Bernthal was the first call he made. “He had told me that he was writing something for me,” Bernthal tells Paste. “Which is super exciting and a huge honor and very flattering. Frank is one of the great storytellers that we have. He’s an absolute brilliant writer. It’s great to have a friend and a partner like that.”
The two men first worked together on AMC’s The Walking Dead. Bernthal’s character Shane was killed off in the zombie hit’s second season. To the shock of the cast and crew, AMC also fired Darabont during the show’s sophomore year. “Frank got right back up and decided to fight another day, which says a lot about his character,” Bernthal says. “He obviously is in a position where he doesn’t have to work. Mob City is very much a passion project for him the same way that The Walking Dead was.”
In the series, which will air two episodes a week for three weeks beginning tonight at 9 p.m., Bernthal stars as Jon Teague, a 1940s Los Angeles police detective with questionable alliances. “With Shane, Frank really wanted me to play a caged animal,” Bernthal says. “He was very specific that in this project, he wanted me to play the cage. He wanted me to let off very little and not reveal exactly where I was at emotionally and what my strategy was.”
The series is based on L.A. Noir: The Struggle for the Soul of America’s Most Seductive City, by John Buntin. The book tells the real-life conflict between the West Coast mob and the L.A. police department in the years following World War II. But Darabont, who wrote, directed and executive produced the series, decided early on that Mob City would not vie for historical accuracy. “This is honestly the loosest adaptation I’ve ever done,” he says. “I gave myself license to make up as much as we needed to make up to tell the most entertaining, good, sort of meaty mob story. That’s the promise that I wanted to deliver on. We’ve thrown caution to the wind on this one.”
The weaving of fact and fiction creates a compelling world rooted in reality. “Frank takes this sort of fictional little problem and as it spirals out of control it bleeds into the real underbelly of the history of LA,” Bernthal says. “I’ve always been a huge fan of movies like Forrest Gump where this fictional character bleeds into history. It’s a very smart, creative, beautiful way of sort of answering mysteries.”