The stabbiest show on television is also one of the best; based on its first season, I’d give “The Following” a 9 out of 10.
The premise is a goddam creative and scary mashup. Cults exist (and are frightening) in real life; serial killers exist (and are frightening) in real life. Why not base a horror series on a cult of serial killers? With the advent of the Internet (as the show wisely incorporates) it seems so obvious that you wonder why it hasn’t been written before.
Other aspects of the story are also highly creative and original. The cult’s “literary” ideology (as opposed to a strictly religious one) is a nice twist, and nicely plausible. Adding in the domestic terrorist angle also makes sense and makes for a scarier group of adversaries.
In the real world, I imagine such a marriage would be more difficult than the show depicts. I was a mediocre psychology student, but I do remember some things. Serial killers tend to work alone. Many are sociopaths who are incapable of empathy, and they’d therefore be actually less likely to be attracted to a cult out of a need to “belong.” Sociopaths are also egotists who aggrandize themselves; they would be less likely to idolize a cult leader than you or I would. Finally, they actually do not come from “all walks of life.” There is a preponderance of white males in their 20’s and 30’s, and they’re usually of above average intelligence.
All of the above are forgivable in exchange for a great story device.
This show has good acting all around, but especially from Kevin Bacon (of course) and Valorie Curry as “Emma.” Shawn Ashemore is really good. James Purefoy is great as the Big Bad — I’ve liked this guy as far back as his turn in “Resident Evil” 12 years ago.
If the show does have a problem, it’s that it spends too much time following characters that are thinly drawn and neither interesting nor likable. Does anyone really care about Emma, Jacob and … that other guy? Episodes devoted to them are less enjoyable. Clare and Joey are so thinly drawn that they’re usually boring. The most interesting character is Annie Parisse’s Debra — especially after we discover her motivations via flashback. The show might actually be stronger if it were centered around her, instead of Kevin Bacon’s Ryan Hardy.
There is an overused and predictable story-arc plot device. Various characters are kidnapped by the bad guys only to be rescued — I think the show went back to the well one too many times with this story concept.
There is also the occasional cliché, like the reluctant hero and the killer’s “we’re the same” speech.
Still, this is good stuff — it isn’t NBC’s superior “Hannibal,” but it’s still a terrific show.

Great review, but I’m not a fan. When it first came out, I wanted to like it, because I’m a Kevin Bacon fan. But, the guy you like, James Purefoy, just bugs me. Maybe I just don’t like his looks. And the negatives, that you listed as forgivable, for me, are not. I subscribe to a number of real life conspiracies, but after the second or third episode I was like: C’mon! I watched the recap of season 1, that they put together gearing up for season 2, and there were things that I liked. But then, they showed Joe Carroll all burn-scarred and I was immediately turned off again. Some of the violence is also a little off-putting. I used to watch Criminal Minds, but the depravity started to get to me. The show that I do like is The Black List. It also strains credulity, and can be a little over the top violent, but for some reason I can accept it better than The Following. — YUR
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