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‘The Consultant’ review: Christoph Waltz is sublimely scary in this uneven workspace thriller
The Hindu
The many moving parts and ominous reveals of ‘The Consultant’ do not come together to deliver a cohesive wallop
The Consultant’s strengths are also its weaknesses. The series, billed as a workplace comic-horror-thriller (which pretty much describes our work lives), is led by the sublimely scary Christoph Waltz.
He fixes you with his creepy charming act and you are like the proverbial moth fluttering helplessly against that seductive beam of light until you realise that you have seen that coldly calculating beam before and might do well to fly away, rather than go through all the bother of singeing your wings and what not.
There are startling twists peppered throughout the show starting with the first episode where the probable origin of Waltz’s character’s name, Regus Patoff, is revealed. There is a bizarre nightclub sequence, a beautiful Russian amputee, Catholics and discussions on exorcism, a jeweler with a troubled conscience and an elephant running amok in Los Angeles.
Based on Bentley Little’s 2015 novel, The Consultant tells of a mobile gaming company, CompWare, which finds itself adrift at the sudden death of its 20-year-old CEO, Sang (Brian Yoon). A primly dressed man, Patoff comes into the office saying he is the consultant hired by Sang to get CompWare back on its feet.
Elaine (Brittany O’Grady), Sang’s assistant, and Craig (Nat Wolff), an easy-going coder, who dreams of becoming a game creator, are instantly suspicious. The deeper they dig into Patoff, the more muddy things become. Patoff sets the employees against each other and makes impossible demands, despite not even knowing what the company creates.
The hope that Sang’s mother (Gloria John), flying in from Korea, will rein Patoff in is dashed when it turns out that Patoff is the only one who can communicate with her, being the sole speaker of Korean in the room—Mama Sang speaks no English. She also mysteriously disappears after Patoff offers to take her to her hotel.
Patoff does not seem to have any idea of boundaries, interfering in Craig’s relationship troubles with his fiancée, Patti (Aimee Carrero), and commenting on Elaine’s ex-boyfriend, the far-from-suitable Patrice (Jake Manley).