
Sometimes it seems as if TV is hellbent on showing us the darkest precincts of our world and then, if you choose to stay tuned in, plunging us neck-deep into
them.
Such is the case with this new NBC series premiering Tuesday night (April 12) called “Game of Silence.” This show is so grim that watching the
premiere episode was about as much fun as attending a funeral.
Appropriately, there’s even a funeral in the show (it’s the one depicted in the
photo accompanying this blog post). The dead person was one of a group of four grown men who were close friends when they were boys, and endured all manner of violence, torture and abuse in a Texas
juvenile detention center when they were inmates there.
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“Game of Silence” is about secrets and revenge. The secrets are the ones the men are
keeping from their loved ones about the terrible things that happened to them during their boyhood incarceration. This period was some time in the late ’80s or early ’90s, although the
show is kind of vague about these kinds of details. At one point in the premiere, the time period for the present day is given as 25 years later.
Here in the
present day, the men are plotting vengeance against their tormentors, including former guards, the warden -- who has become lieutenant governor of Texas -- and assorted other inmates who have
blossomed into full-fledged criminals in their adulthoods.
The vengeance begins spontaneously when one of the friends comes upon one of their former
detention-center bunkmates purely by happenstance. He then beats the man senseless with a golf club, and the show’s secrets-and-vengeance story spins off from there.
Along the way, we learn some of the details about the heinous things that happened to these men when they were boys in juvie. They were beaten by guards and other inmates,
forced to engage in bloody fistfights with other inmates for the entertainment of the warden and possibly, brutally raped.
This last is not yet specified in
the first two episodes of the show that I watched, but it seems implicit. It’s also possible that the writers of this show are saving the details about sexual abuse for some time later in the
series, just when viewers might be forming the impression that the story about what these boys went through can’t get any worse.
Among the stories we
do hear is one about one small boy on a work detail who became accidentally doused in a strong, acid-like chemical solution that burned him over most of his body. Instead of rushing the writhing,
suffering boy to a hospital, the sadistic warden is seen driving him away in a prison van, presumably to his death, while the burning boy cries, screams in pain and begs for his life.
For some reason, TV networks and producers serve up this kind of horrible agony again and again, pat themselves on the back for their great “storytelling”
skills, and call it entertainment.
“Game of Silence” fails miserably on both scores, starting with its title. What exactly is the
“game” here? There doesn’t seem to be anything even remotely “game”-like about this show’s plot.
Aspects of the story don’t seem to
make sense either. For example, when we first see the boyhood friends at play, the words “Houston 1988” appear on screen. But moments later we find out it’s not Houston, but a town
called Brennan that we soon learn is some 80 miles away from Houston. So why did they call it Houston?
Certainly, much of the action in the show takes place in
Houston, not Brennan. Early in the premiere episode, one of the men -- who acts as this show’s narrator (a device that is mercifully kept to a minimum here) -- explains that he moved to Houston
when he grew up because it was 80 miles from Brennan and he really wanted to escape his past.
I don’t know about this guy, but if I wished to escape my
past, I would put more than 80 miles between it and myself. But hey, that’s just me. Suffice it to say, this 80-mile distance is not enough to put this guy’s past behind him, and it does
catch up with him. In fact, if it didn’t catch up with him, there would be no show, because that’s what the show is about.
I will admit that
there were times during these two episodes when I was eager to learn more about the vengeance plans these men were cooking up. But more often, I was repelled by the blood, the torture, the burned skin
of that little boy, and the murders. One man is seen suffocating in a clear plastic body bag, and as he begs for air, he has his head blown off.
Sorry,
“Game of Silence” producers, your gruesome storytelling earns you no pats on the back from me.
“Game of Silence” premieres Tuesday
night (April 12) with its first episode at 10 p.m. Eastern, then moves to its regular time period on Thursday (April 14).