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Lucifer

The Devil redeemed

By Patrizia PoliPublished 2 years ago 9 min read
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Lucifer
Photo by JOSHUA COLEMAN on Unsplash

What better modern incarnation of the nineteenth-century Byronic and Satanic hero than the devil himself?

There are products — television, literary, cinematographic — that stand out not for the plot or originality of the idea and setting, but for a single perfect character. This is the case of the urban fantasy and police procedural series Lucifer, developed by Tom Kapinos, produced by anything but rookie Jerry Bruckheimer, based on a comic, aired from 2016 to 2021, and now distributed by Netflix, which impresses in the collective (and erotic) imagination with its protagonist: Lucifer Morningstar, the rejected son of God, the fallen angel Samael who later became Lucifer, that is “bearer of Light”, or of clarity, of knowledge, of truth.

Fed up of administering justice by punishing and torturing the guilty in the bleak hell, the devil Lucifer incarnates, descends to earth and opens the “Lux”, a successful nightclub in Los Angeles, the city “of angels”. Here he becomes a collaborator of an attractive detective, Chloe Decker, a former movie starlet, helping her, with a capacity for psychological penetration that borders on hypnotism, to clarify cases of crime, of which the viewer would not give a damn if it were not that he is the one to solve them.

Handsome, with an innate dandy elegance and feline movements, Lucifer is played by Welsh actor Tom Ellis. To fully appreciate the acting, you need to listen to the original English where Ellis stands out for his marked and sophisticated British accent among the other American actors. Lucifer is intriguing, intelligent, funny, salacious, irreverent, disrespectful, and exudes indisputable manhood from every pore. The actor is exceptional in rendering the devilry of the gaze: his pitch-black eyes become fixed and even slightly cross when he tempts humans, putting them in front of their most hidden desires. No one resists when captured by Lucifer’s magnetic gaze, which searches inside you to grasp the deep core of your ambitions. Lucifer himself is incapable of telling lies. He doesn’t know how to lie, he always tells the truth even when it can hurt.

The story is about love and redemption. Lucifer is never gratuitously evil. Although he is unbelievably self-centered, he is still an angel, and his actions are dictated by justice. “I’m not evil, I’m not a monster” he is keen to repeat. Although he enjoys luring his victims into temptation, even though he drinks like a fish, takes drugs, has wild and orgiastic sex with women and men, as the narrative progresses, his expressions become more and more human. Basically he turns into a good guy — a good devil, if you allow me the pun — honest and nice, that everyone likes, despite his supernatural strength, his power, his subterranean and menacing danger.

Lucifer is in eternal conflict with his father. And who wouldn’t have a problem with God as a parent? The more he humanizes himself, the more emotions overwhelm him. When he kills his brother Uriel to save the people he loves, he experiences pain, guilt, despair. And, with the passing of the episodes, even his body changes: he loses his demonic face — initially hidden under the human one — and his wonderful, feathery, immaculate wings grow back, despite the rebellious angel tries to cut them off every time.

To tempt him and bring him back to the past comes Eve, the first woman, who had already had an affair with him. She is not evil but she is intrinsically sinful, she wants to be free and not just Adam’s rib, she would like Lucifer to go back to incarnate the devil who seduced her in Eden, therefore she pushes him to cultivate the worst part of himself, violence, the pleasure of torturing sinners, Dionysian sex. And so the monstrous face of Lucifer returns to manifest itself again, his wings are no longer white but become similar to those of a demonic bat.

But Lucifer is not doing that, he rebels, eternally divided between the two parts of himself, the dark and the bright, the devil and the angel. He doesn’t love what he was, what he returns to be with Eve, but neither is he comfortable with the sensations that Chloe makes him feel, with that need she has to tame him and make him bourgeois. He ends up hating himself deeply, in a desperation that is both self-harm and the need for redemption. Eventually, however, he regains control of himself, returns for a moment to be the mighty king of the underworld, and drives out the army of darkness unintentionally unleashed on earth by Eve. The final episode of the fourth season, with the victory of the king of the underworld over the demons and the heartfelt farewell from Chloe before Lucifer spreads his wings and flies to sit on his lonely throne, is the most beautiful episode and could have been the worthy conclusion of the whole series.

But Eve is not Lucifer’s true love. Inevitably, he falls in love with the detective Chloe, beautiful in an angelic way, the only one able to resist his charm and not fall into his arms at the first inviting glance. Chloe is good, selfless, serious, professional, empathetic. Lucifer loves her totally, absolutely, spiritually. He who lives immersed in the pleasures of sex has a pure, selfless, disembodied adoration for her. For Chloe he is ready to sacrifice himself, to defend her and protect her, to renounce her in order to see her happy, to oppose anyone who wants to disappoint or hurt her, to close his protective wings around her. Lucifer loves Chloe as any woman would want to be loved: in a complete, supernatural way, even if he can’t tell her because saying the phrase “I love you” would mean admitting that he is not a demon, because his father, that is God, has never said to love his children (read also all of humanity), but, on the contrary, he manipulated and followed them from above with detachment and without apparent empathy.

The love of Lucifer and Chloe is identified with unconditional union and complicity. Chloe is a kindred spirit, she is a gift placed by God on Lucifer’s path to redeem him, she is the only one capable of seeing him for what he really is, not an evil monster but a man in search of moral redemption. Her smug gaze, when Lucifer casts out demons by showing them his monstrous body and, at the same time, his indisputable royalty, indicates acceptance of every part of him, even the most hideous and dark, and the female admiration for the male power used only when needed and against those who really deserve it.

And the two of them, Chloe and Lucifer, are not only lovers, they are also partners — “partners to the end”, “partners for eternity”. They work in pairs to solve cases, they are a perfect team, he magnetic and impulsive, she rational and staid. They are what every couple would like to be, that is, something special, unique, a perfectly fitted mechanism.

With Chloe, Lucifer feels at home. Hell, he explains to us, was never his home and heaven “was hell”. Because his father despised him, because his mother abandoned him, because his brothers were in competition with him. Because hell is gray, boring, gloomy. Los Angeles, on the other hand, is alive, colorful, alluring, full of charming and warm beings, full of naked, inviting bodies. And he, day after day, feels attracted to them, he feels affection and interest, to the point that his innate and “professional” need to punish people turns into a desire for justice, for redemption for the victims of evil. By human beings, for the first time, he is respected, and he understands that he has a role and a family.

Beneath the surface of this funny, ironic, brilliant and glossy series, God and the Devil, good and evil, intertwine, overturn. Some angels are evil, like Uriel and Michael, while demons discover to have a tender heart and even a soul, like Mazekeen. Cain and Abel, in the third series, exchange roles, make peace. And even Lucifer has a twin, the evil angel Michael, blinded by envy. Impersonated by Ellis himself, Michael stands out for his less clear eyes and a slight curve in posture, two imperceptible differences masterfully rendered by the actor.

God’s will remains inscrutable but often his actions appear to everyone, even to his own children, unjust, evil. Why does God allow suffering that even the Devil tries to prevent?

And God himself truly comes, in season five, to settle the conflicts of his highly dysfunctional family. Perhaps this excessive humanization of the divinity, who puts on an apron and cooks the sauté, is criticizable but certainly the scene of the family dinner with God at the table is one of the most hilarious.

Not only that, God is tired of responsibility and thinks of withdrawing, of leaving someone in charge. Lucifer believes he deserves the job, he knows he would be better than his father, because he would eliminate suffering, hunger and war, while his father left the free will to man that created only pain and injustice. He wants to become God, apparently out of ambition, in reality to finally feel worthy and deserving of Chloe, the most important person in the whole universe for him. And for Chloe, he, self-centered, selfish and vain, is willing to sacrifice his own life. “I choose you” he tells her as he risks dying, for having set foot in the paradise from which he was banished, in order to save her from an untimely death.

In the course of this long series, all human feelings are, from time to time, dissected and analyzed, through the discovery that Lucifer and Mazekeen make and through the character of Linda, the psychiatrist who accompanies them. Linda is involved in the diatribes of the celestials, in their divine and human problems. She must mediate conflicts, make Lucifer and others aware of their emotions: jealousy, love, envy, tenderness, loneliness, vulnerability, friendship, mourning. And these feelings are eviscerated and also connected to the investigations in progress, reverberating in the interrogations, on the suspects and on the guilty.

Great space is given, as expected, to the sense of guilt. Eternal damnation is represented as a continuous endless loop in which one relives one’s sins and the worst moments of one’s life. And while many of the characters experience constant evolution, an uninterrupted search for improvement, with frequent relapses into the negative dynamics of the past, it is precisely the sense of guilt for the evil done to damn us to hell. In short, to be forgiven, we must first forgive ourselves.

Much is also based on the acceptance of the shady part of oneself, especially in the character of Ella, on the need to learn to live with the inner darkness. Where there is darkness, God himself affirms in the fifth season, the light is all the more intense. And, if even the devil has redeemed himself, anyone can do it, to the point that, in the end, Lucifer will discover that his mission is not to become God but not even to torment the damned, but to help them find peace as he found it.

I conclude by saying that I have never laughed and cried as much as with this fantastic TV series. I am a writer and if, with one of my novels, I could make the reader feel half of what the “Lucifer” series made me feel, I would have already created something extraordinary.

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About the Creator

Patrizia Poli

Patrizia Poli was born in Livorno in 1961. Writer of fiction and blogger, she published seven novels.

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