‘Kaos’ overview: Can Netflix’s Greek delusion sequence go the space?

If you happen to’re a scholar of Greek mythology, froth over The Iliad, The Odyssey, and Metamorphoses, could not put Hades or Murderer’s Creed: Odyssey down, or love films and TV reveals like Blood of Zeus, Xena: Warrior Princess, and Disney’s Hercules, you’ll watch Netflix’s Kaos with little confusion. If you happen to’re not up on the key deities of the Greek pantheon or heroes like Odysseus, Perseus, and Theseus (loads of ‘euses’), the sequence might need you scrambling to Google who’s who.

However fortunately, narrator Prometheus is there to information you thru Kaos. He is simply having his liver pecked out by an eagle as he does.

From The Finish of the F***ing World author Charlie Covell, with administrators Georgi Banks-Davies and Runyararo Mapfumo, Kaos is a deadpan, darkish, soapy tackle Greek myths, staying mildly true to their tales and taking liberties the place it really works — typically to make political statements, and typically simply because it is enjoyable. With a sprawling, proficient, principally British solid (a few of whom are deeply underused; whats up, Billie Piper), arresting manufacturing design, and sufficient IYKYK historic asides to sink a galley, Kaos is a nerdy, fashionable foray into legend, with a tempestuous, sybaritic, divine household at its core.

What’s Kaos about?

Janet McTeer as Hera and Jeff Goldblum as Zeus in "Kaos."

Janet McTeer as Hera and Jeff Goldblum as Zeus in “Kaos.”
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

In fashionable Krete, gods meddle with human lives like egomaniacal youngsters in a worldwide sweet retailer, gathering to observe the mortals’ tribulations on TV over household dinner. Televised human sacrifices are given on the common to appease Olympian braggadocio and king of the gods Zeus (Jeff Goldblum). Human political leaders like President — not King, however just about — Minos (Stanley Townsend) pander to the whims of pescatarian playboy Poseidon (Cliff Curtis). Ladies voluntarily slice off their tongues to develop into loyal earthly followers of energy participant and divine queen Hera (Janet McTeer). Amongst all of it, Dionysus (Nabhaan Rizwan) drowns his daddy points in extra.

Nabhaan Rizwan as Dionysus in "Kaos."

Nabhaan Rizwan as Dionysus.
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

However not everybody’s proud of the gods, and dissent simmers all through the streets. Frightened a couple of pesky little prophecy predicting his downfall, and refusing to tolerate blasphemy with out consequence, Zeus decides to zap his human underlings with just a little divine punishment.

Crucially, there are three people important to Zeus’ prophesied downfall: There’s Ariadne or “Ari” (Leila Farzad), dutiful daughter of Minos, who’s crushing on her safety guard Theseus (Daniel Lawrence Taylor) and hoping to peacefully type out Kretians sharing their metropolis with persecuted Trojan Conflict refugees; there’s Eurydice or “Riddy” (Aurora Perrineau), doomed muse of Chris Martin-like pop musician Orpheus (Killian Scott); and there is Caenaeus (Misia Butler), a trans man who needed to go away the Amazons, was murdered, then ended up working within the Underworld.

Leila Farzad as Ariadne in "Kaos."

Leila Farzad as Ariadne or “Ari.”
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

Covell’s observational wit and clear love for the Greek myths comes via his ill-fated narrator, Prometheus (Stephen Dillane), who, hanging from a cliff face, provides Man Ritchie-style commentary in regards to the occasions — all whereas his liver is pecked out every day by an eagle. Fixed photographs again to Prometheus breaking the fourth wall do get just a little tiresome, however they’re essential to protecting the viewers conscious of the significance of seemingly banal moments. 

Kaos performs with figures of Greek myths like toys in a sandbox

Debi Mazar as Medusa in "Kaos."

Debi Mazar as Medusa? Sure, sure, sure.
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

The Greek pantheon is already a heaving cleaning soap opera of adulterous, murderous, power-hungry narcissists, so Covell has a lot to work with becoming them into a contemporary TV sequence. Kaos performs on current reveals like Succession and The Fall of the Home of Usher centred round tyrannical, {powerful} households, with Covell making an attempt to carry just a little Roy household venom to the Olympian dinner desk. The gods had been the originals, in spite of everything.

Covell wields the key gamers of Greek mythology as if enjoying in a sandbox, barely tweaking well-worn element for a contemporary-feeling narrative that avoids going full caricature. The sequence plucks these legendary figures from their reverent pedestals on historic amphorae and gold-framed masterpieces, plunging them into human our bodies in 2024. The present’s depiction of such well-known names as Zeus, Hera, and Poseidon wandering via our world feels very Terry Gilliam and extra grownup than Percy Jackson and the Olympians.

Mashable High Tales

Cliff Curtis as Poseidon in "Kaos."

Cliff Curtis as Poseidon.
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

Covell’s fashionable updates typically really feel like theatrical jests. For one, the doorway to Hades lies in a skip bin in the back of a desert dive bar known as The Cave, the crumbling hang-out of The Fates (Suzy Eddie Izzard, Sam Buttery, and Ché) owned by Poly (Joe McGann), an eye-patched model of the cyclops Polyphemus. The Underworld itself is not a writhing seven circles of Hell as we thought; as a substitute, it is a boring, bland pit of paperwork and center administration, the place a disinterested Medusa (Debi Mazar) trains newcomers. Charon’s (Ramon Tikaram) legendary Styx ferry is a crappy fishing boat. The mighty three-headed Cerberus, guardian canine of the underworld, is shrunk right down to the cutest platoon of three-headed sniffer canine you will ever see. They’re all intelligent, considerate interpretations of well-known figures, dropped at life by a proficient solid that commits.

Transfer over, Zeus: The supporting characters of Kaos are the true gods

Sam Buttery, Suzy Eddie Izzard, and Ché as The Fates in "Kaos."

The Fates themselves! Sam Buttery, Suzy Eddie Izzard, and Ché.
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

The massive drawcard and advertising emphasis for Kaos is Jeff Goldblum as king of the gods Zeus, with the promise of the gregarious actor dabbling in numerous lightning-bolt knee-jerk reactions and narcissistic dangerous administration. And Goldlbum does ship, enjoying each the frivolous celebration god and the brutish, thunderous bully. However the monarch of Olympus is arguably outshone by the opposite members of the pantheon and the present’s human heroes. 

Curtis just about steals each scene he is in because the bored, indulgent Poseidon, lounging about on his superyacht The Trident and offering the infusion of humor this present wants — a expertise Mazar shares because the deadpan Medusa. David Thewlis is completely solid as Hades, a tie-wearing bureaucrat who’d most likely bore you to loss of life earlier than something, and Rakie Ayola provides Persephone an amiable practicality missing within the different gods. McTeer’s Hera, a steely queen giving Claire Underwood vitality, will get the lion’s share of the characteristically bonkers Greek god actions: shapeshifting into Zeus for a human sexual tryst then turning his lovers into bees, slicing off the tongues of her followers and utilizing them as macabre listening units. The standard.

Though he is given ample display screen time and brings credulous, romantic sweetness to the god, Rizwan feels comparatively secure as Dionysus, the PG god of wine, insanity, ecstasy, and hedonism. A effective True Blood purveyor of Bacchanalian extra, this Dionysus isn’t.

Billie Piper as Cassandra in "Kaos."

Billie Piper is in “Kaos” for a second as Cassandra. Extra please!
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

On Earth, the supremely proficient Billie Piper is criminally underused as Cassandra, making an affect regardless of her small function because the prophet who’d by no means be believed. Farzad and Perrineau are compelling and earnest as Ariadne and Riddy, two good, sturdy girls who’re concurrently placed on a pedestal and undermined by the lads of their lives, and who’re decided to reclaim their company. Butler is an understated deal with as Caenaeus, making romantic even a spot as morose because the Underworld. And although Scott brings the correct lovelorn theatricality to Orpheus, the present crushed his characterisation for me with one overwhelmingly tacky tune carried out at a live performance proper from the beginning. This man’s musical skills want to have the ability to pull his spouse out of Hell. That “Eurydice” tune isn’t it.

The trustiest supporting stars of the sequence are those that dwell in The Cave, with Izzard and her fellow Fates making me need to be part of no matter band they’re forming. Equally, the justice-delivering Furies (Cathy Tyson, Natalie Klamar, and Donna Banya) carry a constant, swaggering Western vibe to the sequence.

For me, a mythology nerd, the sequence barely suffers from its extraordinarily restricted pantheon, with Dionysus the one one of many “youngsters” to point out as much as Zeus and Hera’s household barbecues. It is attainable Covell is protecting the remainder of the gods and goddesses for subsequent season, however Olympus feels empty and not using a hint of Demeter, Aphrodite, Athena, Artemis, Apollo, Ares, Hephaestus, and Hermes — all rife for comedic characterisation of their very own. 

Kaos leans little on CGI, as a substitute making each final bodily element rely

David Thewlis and Rakie Ayola as Hades and Persephone in "Kaos."

David Thewlis and Rakie Ayola as Hades and Persephone.
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

Greek myths are sometimes troublesome to depict, difficult historic amphorae painters and Renaissance artists alike. However Kaos leans away from an excessive amount of CGI (although there’s a little; three-headed canine do not simply draw themselves) and towards opulent, theatre-like manufacturing design from Dick Lunn for the varied environments. Covell developed Kaos from a brief play known as The Firm Challenge, in order that tracks. Eurydice’s ache at not with the ability to submerge within the River Lethe is superbly executed, with Perrineau seemingly strolling on water via hidden, old-school manufacturing tips. If you happen to label a easy door as “Earth” and wish your viewers to consider it is a portal, it takes loads of work round that choice to make it make sense — and Kaos makes it occur.

Not at all is about ornament and design in Kaos an afterthought, with meticulously detailed and tongue-in-cheek Easter eggs hidden via each scene. Costuming by Rebecca Hale and hair and make-up by Vickie Lang is modern and delicate, with lightning-bolt trimming for Zeus’ leisure go well with and Medusa’s snake hair stored at bay with a headband. The set design and ornament contains miniscule references to folks and locations of Greek delusion — a Tyndareus Gasoline petrol station; cereal aisle stuffed with Gaea’s Granola, Achilles’ Heels, and Spartan Crunch; shops promoting toy variations of Poseidon’s trident and Zeus’ lightning bolt; and sports activities groups named for beings just like the Satyrs. There’s ample quantity of foreshadowing of characters’ fates in fly-by references, like Eurydice shopping for Underworld fave the pomegranate on the grocery store.

Set-wise, Kaos is a luxurious feast on one hand, an deliberately soulless pit on the opposite. Mount Olympus is a palatial, verdant advanced with elegant fountains, gilded baroque eating units, informal peacocks, and gluttonous feasts on the plush garden. Within the Underworld, Kaos joins Loki, Good Omens, and The Umbrella Academy in the insistent development towards fantasy realms as mid-century modernist, with omnipotent deities inexplicably utilizing chunky telephones and outdated know-how to speak with one another. A lot of the motion takes place within the Underworld, the place Kaos depends on a black and white filter to symbolize the lifeless realm; it really works from a finances perspective whereas lending a simple class.

Misia Butler as Caenaeus in "Kaos."

Misia Butler as Caenaeus with a liiiiitttlle Cerrrrrberuuuuus eeeeee.
Credit score: Justin Downing / Netflix

The longer term for Kaos is left on a cliffhanger, teasing a second season and leaving a good few storylines unaddressed on the shut. Narrative-wise, the story appears to be resulting in extra of its titular chaos, so we will most likely anticipate extra Greek mythology-level bonkers pandemonium in Season 2. As for the primary season, lovers of Greek delusion will inevitably spend the eight episodes smugly declaring references, whereas newcomers would possibly really feel barely adrift as to who’s who. However it’s an entertaining, soapy, surreal sequence that performs nicely with the gods, wrath be damned.

How you can watch: Kaos is now streaming on Netflix.