Lovecraft Country - Season 1, Episode 3: Holy Ghost - Reviewed



Courtesy: HBO
Atticus may be the one with mystical secrets in his bloodline, but Leti is the star of the show in this episode, as Lovecraft Country returns to Chicago and tries something completely different. In terms of its supernatural plot, Holy Ghost feels a bit like the show's first monster-of-the-week episode, as it presses pause on the Cthulhu mythos elements and the Braithwhite family legacy and instead tells a classic haunted house story, with a twist exploring the racism of the 1950s as pioneering black families began to desegregate neighborhoods. But this episode is also crucial to the series' character development, as we learn a lot about Leti, and explore her motivations, desires, and insecurities. Misha Green's writing is again on-point when it comes to her talent for character development, and her skills at balancing supernatural and real-life horrors, and Jurnee Smollett carries the episode with a powerhouse performance.

Courtesy: HBO
After coming into some unexpected money, Leti decides to buy a house on Chicago's still-all-white North side, and turn it into a boarding house and safe haven for her artist and activist friends, as they form strength in numbers to try and desegregate the neighborhood. It doesn't take long for her racist white neighbors to start a campaign of harassment and threats of violence, as she, Atticus, and her friends take a stand. A more unexpected problem, however, is that the house turns out to be maliciously haunted, by the ghost of a white killer and the restless souls of his black victims. Both plotlines are very well-told. The haunted-house story in particular is extremely creepy and effective, with some truly unnerving imagery and very nasty gore. And as with the first episode about sundown towns, the dramatic plotline about the characters taking a stand against the segregation of the neighborhood is excellent in its own right. But both stories are particularly compelling in what they tell us about Leti.

Courtesy: HBO
One of my only gripes about the first episode of Lovecraft Country was that we got so little backstory on Leti, to really get to know who she is; looking back now, I see that that was probably the point all along. Leti is a woman who is aggressively trying to move on from her past, and redefine herself as a strong woman rather than the wayward misfit kid her family in Chicago still treats her as. The more we learn about her, the more we learn that the distancing from her past, and the focusing on the present, is very much deliberate. Amid the civil rights movement building up around them, and after the otherworldly horrors of the last couple episodes throwing her worldview into upheaval in a way that only Atticus really understands, she is trying to find her place in the world, her inner strength, and her path forward, and this episode sees her navigating all of those things in a big way. She is a wonderfully multi-layered character, with so much more going on internally than the surface of the script reveals, and Misha Green's writing and Jurnee Smollett's acting do a beautiful job of conveying that.

This episode also sees Michael K. Williams move up to series regular, with the iconic The Wire and Boardwalk Empire star taking the already stellar cast up yet another notch. Since this episode is so thoroughly Smollett's show, Williams doesn't get a ton to do, but his scenes as Atticus's largely-absent father Montrose are quietly powerful, and Montrose's tense relationships with the rest of the family add some powerful complications to the character dynamics. It will be very exciting to see how his character develops and works within the ensemble going forward.

Courtesy: HBO
Holy Ghost is another very strong episode of Lovecraft Country, better paced than its predecessor, and just as strong as the first episode in its combination of real-life and fantastical horrors. The way it really explores the motivations and internal life of one of our core characters is very effective, and both Leti as a character and Smollett as an actress really shine. Hopefully subsequent episodes will dive into the characters of the other family members just as effectively. By breaking away from the core Braithwhite/Cthulhu mythos and doing something so different, the episode also broadens the horizons of what Lovecraft Country can be, and gives the show the possibilities to explore all kinds of supernatural plots. Definitely a good sign for the show's longevity, both in this season and possibly beyond.

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- Christopher S. Jordan


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