A rising attorney finds his perfectly
crafted life threatened when his long-lost childhood friends threaten to expose
a dark secret from their past.
Game of Silence is a NBC mid-season release in the Law and Order SVU time slot. This new dramatic suspense
series comes from Writer / Producer David Hudgins. This is his second series, he is also known for Friday Night Lights and Parenthood. This is his first try at dramatic
suspense.
Game of
Silence stars, David
Lyons as Jackson, a successful Houston Criminal Lawyer. Lyons, well known
as Vincent Faraday aka The Cape from The Cape.
Most recent from NBC’s Revolution,
as the angst ridden Sebastian 'Bass' Monroe.
Also
starring, Michael
Raymond-James, as Gil, a temper driven construction worker, is recently
known for his portrayal on Once Upon a Time
as Neil Cassidy aka Rumplestiskin’s son Belfire. Also as the original Big Bad
on True
Blood, Rene Lenier
Larenz Tate,
plays Shawn, best friend of Gil and a seemingly well-adjusted man with some commitment
issues. Tate is known for his role as Malcolm Kaan on HBO’s House of Lies.
**Spoiler
Alert**
Jackson is a
big time criminal lawyer in Houston, TX. Engaged to a beautiful lawyer, who
happens to be his boss, and is up for partner at the law firm where they both
work. He’s worked hard to build his life.
Jackson is focused on the future, not the past.
The past,
however, always come back to haunt you. Specifically, Jackson’s past and one
particular summer where he and his friends got themselves into some trouble. This
trouble sent the four boys to a juvenile correctional facility call Quitman.
Now we meet
Jackson’s childhood friends, present day. Then there is Boots, who is a blue
collar worker, married with a baby on the way. Gil and Shawn, best friends and
owners of a construction business that maybe a little shady. Shawn is
well-adjusted with serious commitment issues while Gil is a hot-head with a
very short fuse.
In the pilot,
the story begins with Boots kissing his pregnant wife’s belly before leaving
for work and bidding her good-bye until that evening. He is a mover and has a
job in Houston for the day. When Boots arrives at the site, a man is standing outside
smoking a cigarette and talking on the phone. Boots apparently recognizes him
from flashbacks Quitman and snaps. Grabbing a golf club he beats the man to a
pulp and is arrested.
Gil and Shawn
arrive on Jackson’s law firm, pleading Boots case and asking for assistance. It
is obvious none of them have seen each other in a while Jackson is hesitant, Gil
convinces him by telling him the man Boots beat was Daryl, torturer from
Quitman.
There the story
rolls along pretty seamlessly. The men start to dig up old memories and
experiences from Quitman. Jackson tries to play it off as the past, while Gil
and Shawn are still both very raw. They want revenge for Quitman and Jackson
wants no part of their plans.
Everything
changes when Boots dies from being stabbed in prison, and Jackson discovers the
warden who ran Quitman when they were young is running for Congress.
Jackson
decides that yes, they should get justice the right way. They collect evidence,
build a case and bring them offenders to justice. This plan quickly goes awry
when Gil goes off the rails. It goes from bad to worse when Gil kills an
ex-guard just after the group gets him to confess on video.
We also have
the Warden/Congressman’s men thinking there is a group forging an attack
against them.
As a reviewer,
Games of Silence has all the elements of a hit. The formula is there. the show
is well written, well cast and has several very lean subplots to keep things
interesting.
As a viewer,
I found Game of Silence to be very dark and heavy due to the content, and numerous
violent flashbacks. As this can be a good thing in a television show, if there
is nothing to offset the darkness it does become too much to handle. There is
no lightness to the show, no hope. The characters, while well written and very
complex, are not very likable. I want to root for them to succeed, however I don’t
like any of them enough to care either way.
If Game of
Silence were a two-hour movie I would say bravo, great, a riveting and thoughtful
piece. But, it’s not a movie it is a serial drama, and I don’t believe anyone
will be able to stomach the raw emotional turmoil the show projects for very
long.
Nice try,
NBC, but I can’t do it, sorry.
Disagree?
Please let me know your thoughts on Game of Silence or any of my other posts.
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