
‘The Terminal List’ review: Sublime Chris Pratt anchors a middling action series
The Hindu
If not for Pratt’s pitch-perfect portrayal of a well-written protagonist and some great action choreography, this series might have ended up being an exhausting watch
"It's a mistake to push a man to violence when violence is what he has dedicated his life to perfecting." This popular anonymous quote paints a picture of a broken, wronged soldier who is pushed to the edge in Chris Pratt em The Terminal List.
Pratt embodies a character called James Reece, and he utters the above quote at a crucial moment. For someone who comes across as a breathing testament of a methodical war machine, whose emotions are supplemented by logic, this line comes across as a moment of vulnerability, encapsulating what The Terminal List is about.
The soul of the show is Reece, the Commander of SEAL Team 7, who loses everything near and dear. During a covert underground mission in Syria, Reece's SEAL team is unexpectedly ambushed by enemy forces and 12 of his men perish. The wounded, confused, and grieving Reece heads back home, only to suffer more personal tragedies; days after his friend and fellow team member dies suspiciously, people closest to Reece are assassinated by a mysterious gang. The show doesn't even give him a breather to process the shock. The authorities begin to suspect Reece, who we now realise is suffering from PTSD and a tumour in his brain from the failed mission. Did a mentally-unstable soldier kill his own? Is he hallucinating these assassins? Or is there a bigger conspiracy at play?
Reece goes on a mission to avenge the fallen and find the truth. The series begins with a great first episode, directed by Antonio Fuqua, that aptly registers the tone of the ones that are to follow. Every moment, in the series of tragic events that happened to Reece, is elaborated. In fact, the series takes its time to show us the real weight of trauma that Reece is suffering from. Recurring flashbacks and fascinating dream-like sequences even make him an unreliable narrator of sorts for some time.
The subsequent episodes, however, fail to capitalise on this start. Ordinary sequences with ordinary turns of events are stretched and stacked one after the other, and the broader narrative takes quite some time to unravel. A series that already reads like the 'PTSD-suffering American soldier on a revenge mission' cliche cannot afford to have such exhausting episodes.
The show eventually finds its strength in the final three episodes that don't try too many things out of the ordinary, and yet manage to surprise us now and then. The action choreography, particularly in these episodes, is a treat to watch. The writing of these 'sub-missions' is concise and the writers seem to have taken a leaf out of many older conventional greats in the genre, like Rambo. Specifically, there is a riveting chase scene set in the woods that leaves a lasting impact.
Unfortunately, even here, there is a lot of convenience in how Reece escapes the chase finally. Convenience might also be the reason for the show's liberty in changing moral stand on whom to kill and whom not to kill. For a series that puts in so much effort to get us behind the hero's cause, such discrepancies don't help.