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Review of 'Reckoning'

Reckon It's Great

By Paul LevinsonPublished 4 years ago 2 min read
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My wife and I binged Reckoning, an outstanding psychological thriller about a serial killer and the detective bent on nabbing him that's been on Netflix since May. The ten episodes are each little masterpieces in themselves, and there's more than enough room for a second season, which I'd put at the top of any list to watch.

Aden Young from Rectify plays Detective Mike Serrato. In fact, Sertato is so much like Daniel Holden from Rectify that I could easily believe it's same character, a little older and a little less tormented. Whether that's a limitation of the actor or not, I don't care. Young does such a memorably effective job in both roles.

Serrato, as I said, is a little less tormented. But not much. He's vexed to the point of his own sanity about not catching this serial killer, played, also to perfection, by Sam Trammell from True Blood. And indeed Trammell's Leo Doyle is the most difficult kind of serial killer to catch. He doesn't want to be a serial killer. He's constantly fighting his basest instinct. He wants to let his victim go -- he wants to save them, from himself -- and sometimes he does.

The wives of these two men are complex characters, too -- not just throwaway players, as wives of cops and killers often are in these kinds of stories. Simone Kessell does a great job as Paige, a psychologist who can't rid her husband of his demons, as intelligent and empathetic and tough as she is. And Laura Gordon is excellent as Leo's wife, but I can't tell you more about her story without giving a little too much away.

How good is Reckoning? Even the kids are standouts, especially Pax (Leo's son) and Sam (Mike's younger daughter), well played by Ed Oxenbould and Milly Alcock. And I'll also throw in a plaudit for Gloria Garayua as Cyd Ramos who is Mike's partner, and, like everyone else, gives more than you usually get from detective partners in these tales. There in fact is not an off note in the acting, plot, or dialogue. Back to what I said at the beginning -- bring on a second season.

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About the Creator

Paul Levinson

Novels The Silk Code, The Plot To Save Socrates, It's Real Life: An Alternate History of The Beatles; LPs Twice Upon A Rhyme & Welcome Up; nonfiction The Soft Edge & Digital McLuhan, translated into 15 languages. Prof, Fordham Univ.

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