
‘the alienist’ review: nothing alienating about tnt’s deft 19th century drama
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It is a long way from the uneven streets of 1896 New York City to the well-heeled slopes of Park City, but TNT’s _The Alienist_ will feel right at home at this year’s Sundance Film Festival
among the top-notch films premiering over the next week. With a preview screening set for January 19 at the festival ahead of its January 22 premiere, the limited series starring Dakota
Fanning, Daniel Brühl and Luke Evans based on Caleb Carr’s 1994 bestseller is a great yarn that has been deftly translated into a fine drama. Having taken decades to come to any screen
(small or big), the 10-episode effort executive produced by Cary Fukunaga and Eric Roth was well worth the wait, as I say in my video review above. Much of that satisfaction has to be due to
the efforts of director/executive producer Jakob Verbruggen and screenwriter Hossein Amini, who have thoroughly captured the psychological and cultural shifts detailed in Carr’s immersive
novel. However, as a changing New York City and America teeters on a new century, the spotlight here has to be the trio of leads, especially Fanning. _Inglourious Basterds_ alum Brühl and_
Hobbit_ vet Evans are very good, but it is her Sara Howard is the axis around whom _The Alienist_ rotates. As a secretary of then-police commissioner Theodore Roosevelt seeking to become the
first female detective among New York’s finest, Fanning never hesitates in that capacity. Joined by Brühl’s acerbic psychologist and Evans’ newspaperman, Fanning’s Sara delves as
assertively into solving the grisly murders of a several boy prostitutes in the emerging metropolis as she does fighting the conventions of the time – many of which are still with us. In
that sense, _The Alienist_ is a timely thriller whose greatest limitation is that “limited series” label tagged to it. From what I’ve seen, more of the Paramount TV and Studio T produced
_The Alienist — _which has a sequel in 1997’s _The Angel of Darkness — _would be a good thing. Click on my video review above for more of my opinion about TNT’s big original programming
play. Have you read_ The Alienist_ novel? Will you be watching the series? You should — whether you are at Sundance or not. _This review was originally posted on January 17_