At my house, we are BIG fans of Justin Cronin's trilogy that begins with The Passage. My husband has finished all three books, and my son and I have read the first two and plan to read the third (I'm thinking Big Book Summer Challenge). So, we were all very excited to hear it was being made into a TV show. My husband and I just finished watching season 1 of The Passage
on Fox, and we loved it! It's not exactly like the book in every
detail, but it sticks to the basic story and is really well-done.
Whether you have read the books or not (though of course, I recommend
that you do!), the TV show is riveting and quickly became our favorite
show this winter.
Dr, Jonas Lear, played by Henry Ian
Cusick, is desperate to find a cure for his wife Elizabeth's early-onset
Alzheimer's disease. He and his best friend, a neurologist named Dr.
Tim Fanning, played by Jamie McShane, travel to South America when they
hear about a man who is immune to disease. What they find, though, is a
monster who, when they try to capture him, bites Tim and passes his
freaky condition onto the doctor. Now, Jonas has two goals: to cure his
wife and his best friend. He establishes a team and gets funding from
the DOD to find a way to control this strange virus that transforms its
victims into blood-hungry but super-human creatures. When a bird flu
pandemic breaks out in Asia, the pressure mounts to find a way to cure
it using a version of this virus.
Brad Wolgast, played by
Mark-Paul Gosselaar, is one of the FBI agents tasked with traveling
around the country to pick up death row inmates with no families who
have been chosen for the testing of this modified virus, to try to get
the immunities it provides without the drastic side effects. Given the
choice between execution or a "drug trial," eleven prisoners choose to
travel with Brad and his partner to a secluded research facility in
Colorado. When the bird flu worsens, the scientific team gets desperate
and concludes that a child would be the perfect host for a virus with
just the right characteristics. Brad is sent to pick up Amy Bellafonte,
played by Saniyya Sidney, a 10-year old girl whose mother has just died.
On the way back to Colorado, though, Brad realizes he can't deliver
this innocent child to whatever horrible things are happening in the
facility, and the two of them go on the run.
All of
that happens in the first episode! I won't ruin the fun with any
spoilers because this show is filled with twists and turns in every
episode. It's an intriguing plot, and the show has plenty of suspense
and fast-paced action, but the relationship between Brad and Amy is at
the heart of it and what makes it so compelling. All of the actors do a
great job in their roles and are a big part of what makes this show so
good, but Gosselaar and Sidney, as Brad and Amy, keep you coming back.
Little by little, through season one, you not only see what the
scientists are doing but also get flashbacks on who each of the
prisoners was before they arrived in Colorado, including what their
lives were like and how they ended up in prison. They all develop some
telepathic abilities and so begin to interact with the staff, even
though they are kept in isolation. Just as in the books, the premise is
original, clever, and thought-provoking. We watched the show as soon as
it aired each week, On Demand, and it was our favorite of the dozen or
so shows we kept up with this winter. Now, we can't wait for season 2!
The Passage has finished its first season, but all episodes are still available free On Demand, on the Fox website (though you might need to sign in with your cable provider's password to view some of the episodes) or on Amazon for $1.99 per episode and $18.99 for the season
(so you could watch those episodes available free on the Fox site and
buy the other episodes on Amazon, if you don't have cable).
Check out this trailer, then watch the first episode, and you'll be hooked, too:
I have had Myalgic Encephalomyelitis/Chronic Fatigue Syndrome (ME/CFS) since March 2002. Both of my sons also got ME/CFS at ages 6 and 10. Our younger son fully recovered after 10 years of mild illness. Our older son still has ME/CFS and also has Lyme disease plus two other tick infections. This blog is about how our family lives with chronic illness, with a focus on improving our conditions and enjoying our lives in spite of these challenges.
Tuesday, March 19, 2019
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