Will ‘Dead’ prequel reinvigorate AMC?

  • By Hector Becerra Los Angeles Times
  • Wednesday, August 19, 2015 4:59pm
  • LifeGo-See-Do

With “Fear the Walking Dead,” the prequel to the hugely popular “The Walking Dead,” AMC will fulfill the desire of Robert Kirkman, creator of the series and the comic book that inspired it, to see a huge city get destroyed by flesh-eating corpses. The series premieres Sunday and will have Los Angeles eventually overrun by legions of peripatetic zombies known as “walkers.”

“We wanted to see a city fall, which is something we didn’t get to see in the comics or the original show,” said Dave Erickson, the new series’ show runner. “I feel what we were able to do was to take the disaster film trope, the zombie film trope and present it in a way where it feels grounded. Where it feels like if this were to happen, this is how it would go down.”

AMC executives are hoping the disintegration of Los Angeles will invigorate a lackluster summer lineup and help heal programming wounds left by notable departures. The network has now bid farewell to marquee Emmy-winning shows — “Mad Men” and “Breaking Bad” — and there are high hopes that the spinoff could become a ratings force not unlike the mothership “Dead” series, one of the most-watched shows in television.

The series, which will certainly feel familiar to “Dead” fans, is determined to stake out its own turf within the increasingly crowded zombie universe. Viewers should almost immediately understand they’ll be seeing a different side to the city than is usually presented in other L.A.-centric apocalyptic tales.

This will be no glimmering, shimmering cliche portrait of L.A., where most of the show’s exterior shots were filmed. (Most interior sequences were done in Vancouver.) Instead, much of the early action will be centered in neighborhoods in L.A.’s Eastside, including Wilson High School in El Sereno, a view of Silver Lake just off of Sunset, the L.A. River and a humble Denny’s a few blocks from the county jail in downtown.

The spinoff seeks to answer one of the nagging unanswered questions of the original series when its lead character, Rick Grimes (Andrew Lincoln), lay in a coma — how did the zombie armies spread in that time? The spinoff picks up before the zombie infestation has exploded, and part of its narrative spine is to demonstrate the unraveling of civilization as the soulless menace slowly unfolds.

Unlike the original, set largely in rural pockets around Atlanta, the spinoff is based in a highly urbanized area. With millions of people — and potential undead — spread over hours of driving before reaching true isolation, Southern California and its endless patchwork of urban and dense suburban neighborhoods presents a different kind of zombie fighting and escape from the original series.

When things go full apocalypse in L.A., just imagine the Battle of Stalingrad on every block but waged between millions of the living and rotting cannibals instead of Germans and Russians. And think you can just hop on your car — preferably a hybrid with good mileage — and head for the desert?

“Everyone gets the same idea eventually and everyone gets trapped,” Erickson said. “It’s the cities that fall the fastest.”

It probably wasn’t a surprise that after a fire jumped over Interstate 15 in the Cajon Pass last month, sending panicked people fleeing from cars that would be transformed into burned-out shells on the freeway, one of the most common comparisons on social media was to scenes of abandoned cars from “The Walking Dead.”

In the spinoff’s premiere episode, there’s a scene in which two of the lead characters, played by Kim Dickens (“Deadwood,” “Treme”) and Cliff Curtis (“Training Day,” “Collateral Damage”), are driving on an L.A. freeway at night. Traffic suddenly stops and you can hear the sound of police giving orders through a bullhorn from one of the thrumming helicopters hovering ominously with blinking lights overhead.

There’s the sound of gunfire. The protagonists eventually manage to speed off around the stop without knowing that something horrifying transpired. It’s an eerie scene because even at that moment, without seeing anything more than the characters did, viewers will know what they don’t: It’s beginning.

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