In an uneven 10-episode first season that ended in January of this year, the Joe and Tony Gayton-created series repeatedly and helplessly brought to mind David Milch's dense, brilliant HBO show, in not just its gritty frontier setting but its characters (Cullen Bohannon is a parallel to Seth Bullock; Doc Durant is Al Swearengen; Lily Bell is Alma Garret and Eva is Trixie) and overall vividly dark aura. "Hell on Wheels" can't compare to "Deadwood," but then few series can -- Milch's drama managed to show the process of a civilization forming out of chaos, and had a singularly strange and wonderful style of dialogue, balanced violence and distress with moments of incredibly warmth and empathy, and offered several dozen complex, compelling characters you wanted only to spend more time with.
In its second season, "Hell on Wheels" seems intent on getting its characters away from the limiting archetypes in which they were first conceived. This is most important to laconic protagonist Cullen Bohannon (Anson Mount), who began the show as a former Confederate soldier (but you know, a nice one, one who freed his slaves of his own accord) devoted to tracking down the Union soldiers who killed his wife and child. Tough as nails and wryly disinterested in what life has to offer outside of his personal quest, Bohannon spent most of the show's first 10 episodes finding a place for himself on the railroad construction crew out of self-preservation and because it provided a solid perch from which to look for his prey. His need to run off and potentially kill people would endanger his job, but he'd find some way back. His drive for revenge came at the expense of much of a personality, though the world-weary flicker of amusement Mount found in the character always showed the potential for more. "Has anyone ever told you what an insufferable ass you are?" Lily (Dominique McElligott) asks him at one point, and after a beat he replies "Yeah," and rides away.
But even those devoted to building, we see, have had to make compromises, and in this new season it's made clear that the widowed Lily who, as Bohannon once put it, has no obvious place out there as she "ain't whore nor squaw," has had to get involved in a relationship she firmly vowed to avoid previously -- that her desire to be treated as independent and taken seriously comes with a certain price. And Elam Ferguson, the freed slave played by Common, has climbed the ladder at the camp at the expense of his personal relationships, having lost his lover Eva to a man who's willing to settle down with her, and no longer comfortable enjoying the camaraderie of the other black railway workers now that he's reporting directly to Durant.
The show has been similarly conflicted about its portrayal of Native Americans, with Christian convert Joseph Black Moon (Eddie Spears) manuevering to protect his Cheyenne family from those in the camp who wanted to kill them while also needing to take down his warlike brother, and Cole representing an awfully progressive point of view on the government's need to make peace with the tribes. But the show now seems ready to challenge those stances, both in its revelations about Lily's changed relationship with Durant and in how it confronts Cole to prove just how liberal he really is.
There are stylistic anarchronisms to the show as well, most notably its habit of setting long montages to contemporary music. But what initially felt like a tic has come to suit the series as it allows its characters to live and breathe a bit more, and as it seems less a series about The Era of The Building of The Railroads and more one about a group of flawed people carving out lives during a particularly iconic period in our country's history. A sequence set to The Dead Weather's "Will There Be Enough Water?" toward the end of this Sunday's season premiere is, dare I say, a little haunting, as it captures different characters in actions that will surely soon cause them trouble, foremost among them Bohannon himself, who heads into certain danger with his eyes wide open and no thought for cutting and running. "This ain't going to end well," someone warns him. "Rarely does," he responds. And it may not, but I'm on board for the ride.
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