‘The ‘Burbs’ review: A charming cast draws you into this mystery

‘The ‘Burbs’ review: A charming cast draws you into this mystery


Sharing with the 1989 Tom Hanks film a title, a vague premise, a little paranoid spirit and a Universal Studios backlot street, โ€œThe โ€˜Burbs,โ€ premiering Sunday on Peacock, stars Keke Palmer and Jack Whitehall as newlywed new parents who have moved into the house he grew up in โ€” his parents are on โ€œa cruise foreverโ€ โ€” in Hinkley Hills, the self-proclaimed โ€œsafest town in America.โ€

Well, obviously not. First of all, thatโ€™s not a real thing. But more to the point, no oneโ€™s going to make an eight-hour streaming series (ending in a cliffhanger) about an actually safe town. Even Sheriff Taylor had the occasion to welcome someone worse than Otis the town drunk into the Mayberry jail. In post-post-war American culture, suburbs and small towns are more often than not a stage for secrets, sorrows, scandals and satire. The stories of John Cheever, the novels of Stephen King, โ€œThe Stepford Wives,โ€ โ€œBlue Velvetโ€ and its godchild โ€œTwin Peaks,โ€ โ€œDesperate Housewivesโ€ (filmed on the same backlot street as โ€œThe โ€˜Burbsโ€), โ€œBuffy the Vampire Slayer,โ€ last yearโ€™s โ€œGrosse Pointe Garden Society,โ€ which I mention in protest of its cancellation, are set there โ€” itโ€™s a long list.

Samira Fisher (Palmer) is a civil litigation lawyer still on maternity leave, a job reflecting her inquisitive, inquisitorial nature. Husband Rob (Whitehall) is a book editor, a fact referred to only twice in eight hours, but which allows for scenes in which he rides a soundstage commuter train to the big city (presumably New York) with boyhood friend and once-more next-door neighbor Naveen (Kapil Talwalkar), whose wife has just left him for their dentist. Samira, Naveen and Rory (Kyrie McAlpin), an overachieving late tween who has a merit badge in swaddling, a recommendation from Michelle Obama on her motherโ€™s helper resume and a notary publicโ€™s license, are the only people of color in town, but racism isnโ€™t really an issue, past a few raised eyebrows and odd comment. (โ€œWhat a cute little mocha munchkin,โ€ says a shifty librarian of baby Miles.) โ€œItโ€™s a nice area,โ€ says Naveen, โ€œand people like to think of themselves as nice, so they try to act nice until theyโ€™re actually nice.โ€

As we open, the Fishers have been tentatively residing on Ashfield Place (โ€œover by Ashfield Street near Ashfield Crescentโ€), for some indeterminable short time. Apart from Naveen, neither has met, or as much as spoken to, any of their new neighbors, though Samira โ€” feeling insecure postpartum and going out only at night to push Miles in his stroller โ€” watches them through the window.

That will change, of course, or this will be one of televisionโ€™s most radically conceived shows. Fascinated by a dilapidated, supposedly uninhabited house across the street โ€” the same backlot where the Munsters mansion rose many years ago, for your drawer of fun facts โ€” sheโ€™s drawn out into a mystery: The rumor is that 20 years earlier a teenage girl was killed and buried there by her parents, who subsequently disappeared. Rob says thereโ€™s nothing in it, and in a way that tells you maybe there is.

Four people stand on the porch of a house and a woman points upward to something unseen.

Lynn (Julia Duffy), left, Samira (Keke Palmer), Dana (Paula Pell) and Tod (Mark Proksch) form a crew of sleuthing neighbors.

(Elizabeth Morris / Peacock)

Out in the world, she will find her quirky Scooby Gang: widow Lynn (Julia Duffy), still attached to her late husband; Dana (Paula Pell), a retired Marine whose wife has been deployed to somewhere she canโ€™t reveal; and Tod (Mark Proksch), a taciturn, deadpan โ€œlone wolfโ€ with an assortment of skills and a recumbent tricycle. (Their shared nemeses is Agnes, played by Danielle Kennedy, โ€œour evil overlord,โ€ the stiff-necked president of the homeownerโ€™s association.) They bond over wine (drinking it) and close ranks around Samira after the police roust her on her own front porch. By the end of the first episode, Samira is determined to stay in Hinkley Hills, warmed by new friends, enchanted by the fireflies and in love with the โ€œsweet suburban air.โ€

Weird goings-on in a creepy old โ€œhauntedโ€ house is as basic a trope as exists in the horror-comedy mystery genre (see Martin and Lewisโ€™ โ€œScared Stiff,โ€ Bob Hopeโ€™s โ€œThe Ghost Breakers,โ€ Abbott and Costelloโ€™s โ€œHold That Ghostโ€ and assorted Three Stooges shorts). Suddenly thereโ€™s a โ€œfor saleโ€ sign on this one, and just as suddenly, itโ€™s sold. The new owner is Gary (Justin Kirk), who chases off anyone who comes around. Tod notes that the security system heโ€™s installed is โ€œoverkillโ€ for a private residence, necessary only โ€œif you are in danger, you have something to hide โ€” or both.โ€ You are meant to regard him as suspicious; Samira does.

Created by Celeste Hughey, โ€œThe โ€˜Burbsโ€ is pretty good, a good time โ€” not the most elegant description, but probably the words that would come out of my mouth were you to ask me, conversationally, how it was. I suppose most of it adds up even if doesnโ€™t always feel that way while watching it. It hops from tone to tone, and goes on a little long, in the modern manner, which dilutes the suspense. The characters are half-, letโ€™s say three-quarters-formed, which is formed enough; everyone plays their part. The Hardy Boys were not known for psychological depth, and I read a lot of those books. A lot. Indeed, depth would only get in the way of the plot, which is primarily concerned with fooling you and fooling you again. When a character isnโ€™t what they seem, making the false front too emotionally relatable is counterproductive; the viewer, using myself as an example, will feel cheated, annoyed. I wonโ€™t say whether that happens here.

That isnโ€™t to say that the actors, every one of them, arenโ€™t as good as can be. Iโ€™ll show up for Pell and Duffy anywhere, anytime. Proksch, well known to viewers of Tim Heideckerโ€™s โ€œOn Cinema at the Cinema,โ€ is weird in an original way. The British Whitehall, primarily known as a stand-up comedian, panel show guest and presenter, makes a fine romantic lead. Kirk is appealingly standoffish, if such a thing might be imagined. As Samiraโ€™s brother, Langston, RJ Cyler has only a small role, but he pops onscreen and, having the advantage of not being tied up in any of the major plotlines, provides something of a relief from them. And Palmer, an old pro at 32 โ€” her career goes back to โ€œAkeelah and the Beeโ€ and Nickelodeonโ€™s โ€œTrue Jacksonโ€ โ€” does all sorts of wonderful small things with her face and her voice. Sheโ€™s an excellent Nancy Drew, and the world can never have enough of those.

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