Pop Culture Happy Hour - American Primeval

Episode Date: January 15, 2025

In Netflix's gritty, brutal Western series American Primeval, Betty Gilpin plays a woman determined to get herself and her son across the frontier. But along the way, they find themselves caught up in... a brewing war between the federal government and a violent Mormon militia. A gruff guide (Taylor Kitsch) might be of some help, but the land is rife with violent factions with competing claims to the blood-soaked soil.Subscribe to Pop Culture Happy Hour Plus at plus.npr.org/happyhour See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:04 In Netflix's gritty, brutal Western series American Prime Evil, Betty Gilpin plays a woman determined to get herself and her son across the frontier. But along the way, they find themselves caught up in a brewing war between the federal government and a violent Mormon militia. A gruff guide, played by Taylor Kitch, might be of some help, but the land is rife with violent factions with competing claims to the blood-soaked soil. I'm Glenn Weldon, and today we're talking about American Prime Evil on Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR.
Starting point is 00:00:31 Joining me today is Sam Yellow Horse Kessler, a producer for NPR's Planet Money. Hey, Sam. Hi, Glenn. Thanks for having me. I'm sure this simple interaction between us will end peacefully and with no sudden and brutal violence. I wouldn't put money on that. Also with us is Veltcher TV critic Roxanna Haddadi. Hey, Roxanna. Hello. Let's get to it. In American primeval, Betty Gilpin plays Sarah, a woman who hopes to reunite herself and her son with her husband, who set himself up in a town on the other side of the Utah territory in 1857. But the frontier is a lot. lawless and violent place. She's got some allies in the form of a sympathetic settler who's established a way station for those headed west. He's played by the great Shea Wiggum. Taylor Kitch plays a gruff loner with a dark pass who reluctantly, annoyingly reluctantly agrees to guide Sarah and her son on their journey. I am aware that our delayed arrival has helped create this
Starting point is 00:01:26 situation. Now, all that matters is whether you are willing to take on the position of our guide or not. I ain't got business and crooks. No, he doesn't. It won't be easy. Utah Governor Brigham played by Kim Coates, is pulling the strings of a violent Mormon militia determined to keep the federal government out of the territory. Sarah and Co. are caught in the crossfire alongside a group of unfortunate Mormon settlers. Throw in bounty hunters, fur trappers, renegade members of the Shoshone Nation, wolves, bears, frostbite, and gangrene. And Sarah and her son will be tested in an unrelentingly brutal fashion before the six-episode
Starting point is 00:02:02 series wraps up. American Prime Evil was written by Mark L. Smith, who co-wrote the Leonardo DiCaprio film The Revenant, and you can tell. It is streaming on Netflix now. Roxanna, you reviewed this for Vulture? What do you think? I have mixed thoughts on this. Like, on the one hand, I am always very drawn to America bad story.
Starting point is 00:02:21 That's like very much, you know, like my catnip. I'm like, you know what? That's correct. And something that I really liked about this is that it is not a Taylor Sheridan project. It is a neo-Western that does not overlap with Yellowstone or, 1923 or Landman or any of the other sort of shows that he has created within his own universe. It is doing something very different from that. I talked about in my review that this is really like three Westerns in one series,
Starting point is 00:02:52 and I think that certain subplots are more effective than others. I think all of the Mormon stuff is really fascinating. It has been covered by John Crackauer in his nonfiction book Under the Banner of Heaven. So I think if you've read that or if you'd watched the FX, adaptation of that. Some of this is sort of familiar. But I appreciated, like, the we're really going to tell you how bad things were because of this religious faction. I think Shea Wiggum great. Kim Coates great. The other subplots, I think, are varying in a narrative singularity. Let's put it that way. But the Mormon stuff, the Shea Wiggum stuff, I'm very pro.
Starting point is 00:03:32 Yeah. I mean, the way this is structured, it is truly an ensemble piece. You're going to be drawn to and things more than others. Sam, where'd you come down? Yeah, pretty similarly. Like, I was a little bit mixed on this whole thing, but I think I came out feeling like this wasn't particularly my thing. This wasn't really for me. And yeah, there was different scenes, different plot lines that my ears picked up a little bit more for, like when Shea Wiggum's on screen or like when Dane DeHon's on screen. And that kind of was like, I generally did not have a lot of positive feelings for this show, but I felt like the redeeming quality behind it was that this was going to contribute to the reels of a lot of actors that I really like.
Starting point is 00:04:10 You know, when I'm starting this out, I'm like, I'm like, that actor looks familiar. Who's that? And then I realized, oh, my God, that's Dane Dahan. I haven't seen Dane Dahan in anything forever. And so I really was just, like, glad to see him in this. And same with Shea Wiggum and same with Betty Gilpin. And I did love just how much, like, the show was 110% of everything. Like, it never for a moment lets up.
Starting point is 00:04:32 I just really thought that, like, that was, like, a major redeeming quality in this show that otherwise wasn't exactly. my thing. Right. You mentioned Dane DeHan. He plays Jacob Pratt. He is one of those very unfortunate Mormon settlers in the Mormon settler storyline. You know, I kind of echo some of what you guys said. I found this engrossing. I found this involving. I found this compelling. It's hard for me to say like when something is as dark and as unrelentably weak and violent as this is. But I got sucked into storytelling here partially, mostly, again, mostly because of that Mormon storyline because the Mormon militia disguises itself as indigenous people and massacres a bunch of settlers, including the caravan that Dane Dahan is in. And then when one of those settlers
Starting point is 00:05:13 survives, the militia takes him along as they hunt down the Native Americans that he thinks were responsible. That, in terms of storytelling, that is just layered. That is layers of evil. That's a turduckin, a flaky croissant of evil. And it's a question of how they will get found out, when they will get found out. That is suspenseful. Do I think that narrative trap was sprung with the same kind of care that it was set up. No, but I still, episodes and episodes went by where I was just really like in that tension. Shea Wiggum, we mentioned I'm a sucker for, and he's got a part here that seems to be written for him. I've grown mighty partial to this location.
Starting point is 00:05:55 And I've also grown way too old and beat down to find another this late than day. So I'd imagine the price it would make me comfortable. It's one that would put a real painful burn up your ass. So good. I mean, it's the closest thing the show gets to humor, right? Betty Gilpin. I'm a sucker for Betty Gilpin. Did I get tired of the way she was always wrong?
Starting point is 00:06:18 Yes. For the same reason, which is that her soft-hearted big city ways aren't made for the cruelty and treachery of the frontier. I get it, right? Yeah. I'm not complaining about it. But I think that was a lesson that she would have learned a lot faster than she does here. Like first episode, get out of the way. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:06:34 Exactly. And there's so much stuff that, like, brought her to this place before, right? That storyline, I mean, like, I love Taylor Kitch. I will always, I'm going to defend John Carter every day of my life. Okay. You're the one. Good for you. You know, that is the sort of most straightforward we got two hot people and they're just going to fight for six episodes until an abrupt resolution.
Starting point is 00:07:01 I wish that storyline had felt more carefully controlled. Or to your point, Glenn, like at least more interestingly set up, I guess. I don't know how we could have fixed that one. But it's like I really like watching these two people on screen. I like watching them be sarcastic with each other. I just needed more from it, I think. This is not where we need to go. What does that mean?
Starting point is 00:07:27 It means whatever you find down there, it's not going to be good for anyone. What about her? What about her? She just said her family was down there. Her family was down there. they'd be screaming through the trees. I think we have to at least see for ourselves. Leave her.
Starting point is 00:07:42 I'm going to say the reason that that plot line didn't work as well as the others is the Taylor Kitch of it all. I mean, like, I found that character. Yeah, the character. One note. I, you know, I love to hate the J.I. Courtney bounty hunter character. I loved the creepy fur trappers who seem to be wearing human skin, I think. But the Taylor Kitch character was just, he starts and ends on the same place, which is gruff, but, you know, reluctantly. Sad man, dead wife.
Starting point is 00:08:05 Yeah. Exactly. All the character tropes you expect. Yeah. Exactly. Beat for beat, right? That's the thing that kind of kick me out of that. Now, since we have decided to cover this show, the reviews have come out, and many of them, not all, but many of them don't seem to be on board with this show's very blunt depictions of violence, which there is, to be warned.
Starting point is 00:08:25 A hell of a lot of. Yeah. Or it's very dark view of humanity. I don't know. I found the violence to be periodically appropriate, shall we say? If I'm watching a show about this time of history, I should be seeing this kind of violence, just to be honest. As far as the show's sensibility about human beings, well, it kind of lines up with mine. I found myself just sort of nodding along going, yeah, that would happen.
Starting point is 00:08:47 That's what that guy would do. People are bad. Did you guys get kicked out by any of that? Only a little bit in the sense that I was just like, aren't people supposed to be like forming societies out here? Aren't people like actually just like having normal jobs at times and like building things? But they just seem to be like, no, they're mostly killing each other. Like if you, you know, three people enter, four people die, like, I don't know how that math is exactly mapping in terms of like the grand, you know, American project. I don't know if that was exactly how things would have worked out back then. And there was like a little bit of like, you know, bullets aren't free. Like, come on, guys. Like, you probably would not shoot that dead person five more times just to be sure that they're dead. Like, let's conserve a little bit here. It worked for me because I think, you know, why I always go back to something like Deadwood is to your point, Sam. It is about like, what does it actually take to build a society. And what I think was really interesting for me here is that, like,
Starting point is 00:09:38 the Mormons have a society. Like, Kim Coates is Brigham Young, I think, is, like, very fascinating. And there's this one scene where in one moment he orders, you know, like the assassination of this woman and the massacre of the Shoshone. And then, like, 30 seconds later, he sees a Mormon family with a bunch of young daughters. And he's going over and, like, kissing them on the forehead and being like, have more. that to me, like that society exists already, right? And the show is saying, like, that's what America became, which I don't think is from my very cynical pessimistic perspective. I'm like, oh, yeah, that checks out. So I do think there are like some very deliberate things here about like what kind of people ended up surviving in this place. But again, that's why I think like the Mormon storyline
Starting point is 00:10:27 worked the most. It felt most connected to what the show is trying to say about, like, what we ended up doing with this country. For not today. Brothers, not tomorrow, but someday in the future, our territory and this entire American continent will be Zion. Yeah, and I'm glad you brought that up, Roxanna, because as you also noted in your Vulture review, the thing that sets this apart, maybe the only thing. The thing that sets us apart is the very explicit way it establishes that religion played a central role in the notion of manifest destiny, American exceptionalism. And that is what's responsible for all this bloodshed we're seeing.
Starting point is 00:11:08 I mean, like that is to tackle that head on and, you know, not subtly, but absolutely head on seems to me like, okay. And also there's this other thing that dramatically, when you establish a character who is so brutally evil, this is something. the Greeks knew, seeing them get their comeuppance as violently as it inevitably happens on the show. That is just viscerally satisfying in every sense of the term. One thing that I really did like about this show was that just I felt like there was a good deal of like cross-pollination between all of these like warring factions where there were like backstabbers and double crossers and people, you know, there was natives who are working with the Mormons. Of course, the Mormons like pretending to be Native American themselves, but also like forging these alliances so that way they could then like stab people. people in the back anyhow. I also to that point, I am very glad that then there wasn't a romance within that cross-pollination because I was very worried that it was going to be like, this nice
Starting point is 00:12:08 Mormon lady falls in love with this noble Native American warrior. I was very concerned about that. They were shutting that up. Yeah, there's sort of this like recognition, I think, rather of like what do both of these groups face from like the white Mormon threat. But I did like that it didn't then plunge into, and then they kiss. I'm glad there was no kiss. Let me just put it that way. How many must die to avenge all you have lost? Himbega son de dia.
Starting point is 00:12:37 No him begot. As many as God tells him to. Your God tells you to kill the whites. Whites believe their God tells them to kill you. It seemed to me like there's a lot of that. edging up to a cliche and then backing away from it, particularly in the depictions of indigenous people. There's something going on in the show
Starting point is 00:12:57 with the depiction of indigenous people because there was an indigenous culture consultant, Julia Keefe, who also worked on killers of the Flower Moon, which I know only because it wasn't so very long ago that that would not have even been considered. But the character of Red Feather, the character played by Derek Hinky, he's a Shoshone warrior,
Starting point is 00:13:13 who is always couched as the renegade, right? He wants war, unlike Winter Bird, who's played by Irene Bedard, So she's not getting slotted into the warrior slot, but she is getting slotted into the wise, sympathetic elder role, which is stereotypical in a different way. And I feel like the show is aching to include Native Americans, but it keeps pushing them to the sidelines, their plot points. I mean, if you want to go looking for the most egregious example, they bring an indigenous character into the main group of protagonists. This is two moons played by Shawnee Poo-Yer, but they make it so she can't speak. they literally do not give her a voice.
Starting point is 00:13:53 I felt the good intentions, but I also felt a little ham-fisted fumbling along the way. Yeah, it is particularly egregious, yeah, just to literally give her no voice. And then, like, she would kind of like recede into the background in scenes. And they used that to good effect at one point where, like, the main trio of Betty Gilpin, her son,
Starting point is 00:14:10 and Taylor Kitch get kidnapped. And I'm like, oh, my God, how are they going to get out of this one? And then, of course, the character that I completely forgot about. And I can't tell if that was intentional or not, the whole time I was supposed to be sitting there being like, oh, but I forgot about two moons. They forgot about two moons. Like, the audience is going to forget about them because she literally doesn't have any character or anything.
Starting point is 00:14:28 And I was kind of expecting, oh, yeah, like, you talked about like leaning into a cliche and then backing away from it. Like, you might have expected her to be like the indigenous like guide to the region where like she knows like the lay of the land and knows like all of the ancient practices to get, you know, them safely to their place. Like one time she like has like input into like a healing thing that like does end up working out. But it's like, she's never actually, like, depicted as, like, particularly knowledgeable about the region. And I'm just, like, always bewildered watching
Starting point is 00:14:56 this. Like, why do they have her there? You know, I feel bad saying that, but like, why do they have her there? Like, she's not contributing very much. And Taylor Kitch is not the kind of character to have, like, dead weight. I just couldn't find, like, any redeeming quality in her. She was just, like, there and sometimes contributing to the plot, but very, very sparsely. The show does leave you with those recurring moments of ambiguity where you sort of have to decide. You're like, is it good that she's here because at least she's part of the group and then she gets to help fight off the wolves
Starting point is 00:15:24 who bash their way into the cabin in one of the most climactic scenes? Like is it good that we didn't make her this like all-knowing sort of communicative force or should they have done more? And I do I don't know. I guess I sort of
Starting point is 00:15:40 respect that the show has some of those pressure and tension points that like make you as an audience member decide maybe I'm doing too much forgiving of the show's tactics. But I like that there are those messy parts that we sort of have to, like, you know, give quality to on our own terms. Yeah. And this is like my soapbox for the episode is that like there is this like, yeah, kind of messy sensation throughout the thing of like, well, the indigenous people are being portrayed as like violent savages who are like conniving and backstabbing and, you know, slit throats and torture people and, you know,
Starting point is 00:16:17 will, yeah, like have violent raids. But that's everyone. That's everyone on the show. Yeah. Yeah, like it was messy to kind of think about like, well, are they doing an injustice by portray Native Americans the same way that, you know, a lot of Westerns do. Or is it just like they're just treating them exactly the same as literally every other character on the show?
Starting point is 00:16:38 Like I almost was like curious to like know like what a Mormon person would think about like the depiction of Mormon's interest as like violent polygamists. Yeah, who are like trying to convert everyone. And it was really, I don't know, while watching this, I was like needling through like, yeah, like the representation is fairly accurate in terms of like costume and, you know, the different tribes and how, you know, the different cultures. But then is that responsible or not in like this show that already has like literally no, you know, redeemable characters? Right. And one thing that happens to a lot of those irredeemable characters is that they die off such that I feel like this limited series is limited. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:16 I think they cleared the call sheet. I don't think there's too many people left. It would be a different series. But in 2025, it feels good to have a six-episode, limited series that tells a story with the beginning, middle, and an end. Right? I'm going to respect that structure. I mean, we could, look, Shay Whigam does just, like, walk off into the wilderness. Shea Wigam spin-off, yeah.
Starting point is 00:17:39 I mean, I would see a Shay-Wingham Spinoff. All of us would be like, let's watch Shay Wiggum's character build a new fort. I would watch that. Like Age of Empires. Just watch him like, you know, build a fort, build a fort, build a fort. Bridger's Place, that'd be, yeah. The TV show, the sitcom TV show. Like cheers, but hits a fort.
Starting point is 00:17:58 I mean, there are Netflix people listening, so let's hope. Yeah, we're, I mean, there's a lot to recommend here. There's a lot that we're scratching our head about, but we want to know what you think about American Prime Evil. Find us at Facebook at Facebook.com slash PCHH, and that brings us to the end of our show. Roxana Haddadi, Sam, Yellow Horse, Kessler. you so much for being here. Thank you. Thank you so much. And just a reminder that signing up for Pop Culture Happy Hour, Plus, is a great way to support our show and public radio. And you get to listen to all of our episodes sponsor-free. So please go find out more at plus.npr.org
Starting point is 00:18:31 or visit the link in our show notes. This episode was produced by Liz Metzker and Lenin Sherburn and Edd by Mike Ketsef. Our supervising producer is Jessica Reedy. And Hello, Come In, provides our theme music. Thank you for listening to Pop Culture Happy Hour from NPR. I'm Glenn Weldon and we'll see you all tomorrow.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.