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Legion (TV series)

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Legion
Legion TV series logo
Genre
Created byNoah Hawley
Based on
Starring
ComposerJeff Russo
Country of originUnited States
Original languageEnglish
No. of seasons1
No. of episodes8 (list of episodes)
Production
Executive producers
ProducerBrian Leslie Parker
Production locations
CinematographyDana Gonzales
Running time44–68 minutes
Production companies
Original release
NetworkFX
ReleaseFebruary 8, 2017 (2017-02-08) –
present (present)

Legion is an American cable television series created for FX by Noah Hawley, based on the Marvel Comics character David Haller / Legion. It is connected to the X-Men film series, the first television series to do so, and is produced by FX Productions in association with Marvel Television. Hawley serves as showrunner on the series.

Dan Stevens stars as Haller, a mutant diagnosed with schizophrenia at a young age. Rachel Keller, Aubrey Plaza, Bill Irwin, Jeremie Harris, Amber Midthunder, Katie Aselton, and Jean Smart also star. FX and Marvel Television announced a new collaboration to create a television series based on the X-Men character Legion in October 2015, with Hawley signed on to write, and direct the pilot. Casting began by January 2016, and filming took place in Vancouver. Hawley wanted to show Haller as an "unreliable narrator", including mixing 1960s design with modern-day elements, and filming the series through the title character's distorted view of reality.

The eight-episode first season of Legion premiered at the Pacific Design Center on January 26, 2017, ahead of its FX debut on February 8. The series received critical acclaim, particularly for its visuals and departure from superhero genre standards. A second season, of ten episodes, was ordered in March 2017 and is planned for a February 2018 release.

Premise

David Haller was diagnosed with schizophrenia at a young age and has been a patient in various psychiatric hospitals since. After Haller has an encounter with a fellow psychiatric patient, he is confronted with the possibility that there may be more to him than mental illness.[4]

Cast and characters

  • Dan Stevens as David Haller: Haller was diagnosed with schizophrenia at a young age and meets the "girl of his dreams" in a psychiatric hospital.[5][6] The character has several psychic abilities, including telepathy and telekinesis.[7] Stevens joined the series because of showrunner Noah Hawley's involvement,[6] and did extensive research on mental health to prepare for the role, talking to both mentally ill persons and doctors.[8] Hawley and the cast kept secrets from Stevens about the character and plot so that the actor could identify with Haller's confusion about reality. [9] Haller is intended by the creators of the show to be the son of the Mutant [[1]], though that was not yet included in the television show. [6]
  • Rachel Keller as Sydney "Syd" Barrett: A young woman who becomes Haller's girlfriend;[5][6] her mind trades places with that of anyone she touches, with hers entering their body, and vice versa.[7] Because of her abilities, the character is portrayed as "withdrawn", the opposite of Keller's breakout performance in the second season of Hawley's Fargo.[10] She is named after Roger "Syd" Barrett of the rock band Pink Floyd, whose music was an important influence on the series for Hawley.[11]
  • Aubrey Plaza as Lenny Busker: Haller's friend, an "impossible optimist" despite a history of drug and alcohol abuse.[5][6] The character dies in the first episode, but reappears as a malevolent aspect in Haller's mind,[12] revealed to be powerful mutant Amahl Farouk / Shadow King who appears in Haller's mind using several forms in addition to Busker.[13] Busker was originally written for a middle aged man, until Hawley met Plaza and rethought the character. However, Plaza insisted that the character's dialogue not be changed for her, instead choosing to play the character as both male and female. This led to Busker "making crass remarks about women and muttering vintage phrases".[14]
  • Bill Irwin as Cary Loudermilk: A scientist,[15][6][16] one of the founders of Summerland and one of Bird's specialists.[17] The character is introduced in the second episode, but Hawley sought to cast Irwin, for his "playful approach to characters", during filming on the pilot, before the character's role had been written.[18][6] Hawley "had to pitch him the weird, crazy character dynamic and that the show is about memory and identity", and Irwin agreed to join the project.[19]
  • Jeremie Harris as Ptonomy Wallace: A former child prodigy,[20][6] one of Bird's specialists.[17] A "memory artist", Ptonomy "remembers everything, and has the ability to take people back into their own memories".[7]
  • Amber Midthunder as Kerry Loudermilk: A savant who lives inside Cary's body.[21][6] Kerry only ages when she is outside Cary, leaving her physically much younger than he is.
  • Katie Aselton as Amy Haller: David's older sister, who tries to remain positive despite his history of mental illness.[22][6] Hawley said that she defined herself as normal "against her brother. She finds herself being looked at as if she might be crazy, as well."[16]
  • Jean Smart as Melanie Bird: A demanding psychiatric therapist.[5][17] Smart joined the series immediately when asked by Hawley, despite knowing nothing of the show and its source material, due to her previous Emmy-nominated work with him on Fargo.[23]

Episodes

Season 1 (2017)

No.
overall
No. in
season
TitleDirected byWritten byOriginal air dateProd.
code
U.S. viewers
(millions)
11"Chapter 1"Noah HawleyNoah HawleyFebruary 8, 2017 (2017-02-08)XLN010011.622[24]
22"Chapter 2"Michael UppendahlNoah HawleyFebruary 15, 2017 (2017-02-15)XLN010021.133[25]
33"Chapter 3"Michael UppendahlPeter CallowayFebruary 22, 2017 (2017-02-22)XLN010031.043[26]
44"Chapter 4"Larysa KondrackiNathaniel HalpernMarch 1, 2017 (2017-03-01)XLN010040.750[27]
55"Chapter 5"Tim MielantsPeter CallowayMarch 8, 2017 (2017-03-08)XLN010050.795[28]
66"Chapter 6"Hiro MuraiNathaniel HalpernMarch 15, 2017 (2017-03-15)XLN010060.732[29]
77"Chapter 7"Dennie GordonJennifer YaleMarch 22, 2017 (2017-03-22)XLN010070.716[30]
88"Chapter 8"Michael UppendahlNoah HawleyMarch 29, 2017 (2017-03-29)XLN010080.812[31]

Production

Development

Creator Noah Hawley set out to create a fresh take on the superhero genre.

After completing work on the first season of Fargo at FX in 2014, Noah Hawley was presented with the opportunity to develop the first live-action television series based on the X-Men comics, of which Hawley was a fan when growing up.[32] Hawley was initially pitched two different ideas for the potential series,[10] including an adaptation of the comics' Hellfire Club, but the ideas did not interest Hawley. Instead, he worked with X-Men film series writer and producer Simon Kinberg to reverse-engineer an idea for the series. After discussing an "interesting show in this genre ... that isn't being done", the two settled on the character of David Haller / Legion. Hawley found the character interesting because of his mental illness, and for the potential of the series to depict his unique mindset.[32] He pitched the series as "a deconstruction of a villain ... and a love story".[10]

In October 2015, FX ordered a pilot for Legion, with Marvel Television and FX Productions producing; FX Productions would handle the physical production. Hawley was set to write the pilot, and executive produce the series alongside X-Men film producers Lauren Shuler Donner, Bryan Singer, and Kinberg, Marvel Television executives Jeph Loeb and Jim Chory, and Hawley's Fargo collaborator John Cameron.[4] Steve Blackman, Alan Fine, Stan Lee, Joe Quesada, and Karim Zreik also executive produce.[33] Hawley's initial script for the series was described as "less fractured", "cohesive [and] much more regular." However, he quickly reconceived the series "and decided more Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind, Terrence Malick, more whimsy, more impressionistic and went in that direction."[10] By January 2016, FX President John Landgraf was confident that the series would be picked up by the network, saying that "the vast majority of things that we pilot do go forward to series" and "the scripts [for Legion] are extraordinary."[34] That May, FX ordered an eight-episode first season of Legion.[15]

In June, Landgraf said that the series, if successful, could run for as many seasons as Hawley feels it needs to tell the story.[35] Discussing future seasons, Hawley said in January 2016 that he was open to continuing the story past the first season, but didn't want the audience to get to the end of the first run and have "no resolution of any kind at the end of it." Star Dan Stevens said, "I know for a fact that there are more issues that David has to deal with than the one that we really address in the first season."[8] Also at that time, Singer explained the executive producers' roles in the series, saying that he, Donner, and Kinberg brought their experience from making the X-Men films, but their involvement generally consisted of giving small notes on scripts and early cuts of episodes.[36] In March, FX ordered a second season of the series.[37] With the end of the first season, Hawley said that the second season would consist of ten episodes, and explained that he was unsure at that time how long he would like the series to run: "I think there were things about the first season that [I felt] would unfold faster than they did, and things that I thought would take longer that I dealt with more quickly. I think by the end of the second year I’ll have a better sense of how many more years there are to go".[38]

Writing

Kinberg teased in November 2015 that the series would tell "X-Men stories in a slightly different way and even with a slightly different tone" from the films, noting the differences in tone between the "operatic" X-Men films and the "irreverent and hysterical" Deadpool, and feeling that Legion gives "us an opportunity to go even further ... in some ways to sort of blow up the paradigm of comic book or superhero stories and almost do our Breaking Bad of superhero stories."[39] Loeb noted that "the core" of all X-Men comic books has always been that "the X-Men were different ... We live in a world right now where diversity and uniqueness and whether or not we fit in is something that's on our minds twenty-four hours a day. The X-Men have never been more relevant than they are right now." Hawley added, "The great thing about exploring this character is before he has an opinion about anyone else, he has to figure out his own shit. That's what we all have to do. This journey isn't necessarily racing toward a battle with an entity, so much as embracing the battle within."[6]

In May 2016, Hawley described his take on the series as being inspired by the works of David Lynch, and said that "the structure of a story should reflect the content of the story. If the story, as in this case, is about a guy who is either schizophrenic or he has these abilities, i.e., he doesn’t know what’s real and what’s not real, then the audience should have the same experience ... my goal with this is to do something whimsical and imaginative and unexpected. Not just because I want to do something different, but because it feels like the right way to tell this story."[40] Elaborating on structuring the series to reflect Haller's point of view, Hawley said, "I love the idea that even when you're in it on the journey, there is this Alice in Wonderland quality to it, of a story within a story."[32] Discussing the increasing popularity of unreliable narrators in television, Hawley said that he wanted to avoid making the audience think that the series is a puzzle that needs to be solved by solving the mysteries for them upfront—"We’re going to take a character out of confusion into clarity and an audience out of mystery into clarity."[18] Hawley deliberately chose not to directly adapt any storylines from the comics, feeling that "you're bound to offend somebody, no matter what you do" in that situation. Instead, he wanted to take the character of Legion and basic set-up around him, and "play" with that,[32] which he described in relation to Fargo—"my job was not to remake the movie, to sort of retell a story that had already been told, but to try to tell a different story with the same effect, the same impact."[41]

Concerning the mental illness aspects of the character, Hawley said, "It’s a tragic condition that people have, and so I don’t want to use it for entertainment purposes ... if we can ground that [aspect] for the audience, then the idea that he’s fallen in love and that he’s not ill, there’s a hope to that that the audience is gonna grab onto."[41] In January 2017, Hawley explained that he was willing to use different tropes from the superhero genre in the series, such as superhero costumes with capes, if necessary, but did want to avoid "sending a message that all conflict can only be resolved through battle. There is a sense in a lot of these stories that everything always builds to a big fight ... I wanted to find a story that was just as exciting and interesting but doesn’t send the message that in the end that 'might makes right'."[7] At the end of the first season, Hawley said, "I like this idea of having to face our demons", with the first season seeing Haller go through an internal struggle with the malevolent Shadow King occupying his mind, and then the second season seeing that character possess someone else "making it an exterior agent. And there’s going to be something very complicated about going to war with himself. It’s been with him since he was a baby, it’s like a phantom limb now, it’s part of him." Hawley said he preferred this idea of a villain "worthy of creating a whole story around", rather than a villain-of-the year. He was unsure at the time how long that storyline would continue throughout the show, but said "it’s a fascinating setup to follow."[38]

Casting

In January 2016, Rachel Keller was cast as the female lead of the series, after her breakout role in Fargo.[42] In early February, Stevens, Aubrey Plaza, and Jean Smart were cast as Haller, his friend Lenny Busker, and therapist Melanie Bird, respectively. Keller's role was revealed to be Syd Barrett.[5][6][17] Later that month, Jeremie Harris was cast in the regular role of Ptonomy Wallace,[20] and Amber Midthunder was cast as the savant Kerry Loudermilk.[21][6] In March, Katie Aselton was cast as Haller's older sister Amy.[22] With the full series order in May 2016, Bill Irwin was added to the cast,[15] in the role of Cary Loudermilk.[6]

Design

Though he put little thought into the aesthetics of the series when writing the pilot,[43] as a director Hawley wanted the series to be highly stylized, describing his vision for it as "a 1964 Terence Stamp movie".[44] It was not feasible to literally translate Bill Sienkiewicz's iconic artwork of the character to the screen, and Hawley wanted the series to have "its own visual aesthetic to it, and part of that is being a story kind of out of time and out of place". He stated that "the design of a show has to have its own internal logic", and compared this sensibility to the series Hannibal, which he said was "a great example of something that had this almost fetishistic beauty to everything that you saw, whether it was food or violence."[41] Hawley elaborated that the design choice of 60s British films came about because "this whole show is not the world, it’s David’s experience of the world. He’s piecing his world together from nostalgia and memory and the world becomes that."[7]

Filming

Filming for the pilot took place in Vancouver,[45] with Hawley directing and Dana Gonzales serving as cinematographer.[40][46] With the series order, the rest of the first season were set to also film in Vancouver,[15][47] with Craig Wrobleski also working as a cinematographer. Both Ganzales and Wrobleski previously worked with Hawley on Fargo.[48] The pilot featured a large amount of in-camera effects, which Hawley admitted would be a challenge for the series' directors to maintain,[19] given he had 21 days to film the pilot, but the subsequent episodes were only scheduled 8 days of filming each. Some of these shoots ultimately had to be extended to 10 or 11 days filming to meet Hawley's vision.[18] For the second season, the series relocated its production to California to take advantage of tax incentives provided by the California Film Commission under its "Program 2.0" initiative.[49]

Music

Jeff Russo was revealed to be composing the series' score in October 2016.[11] Hawley stated that when first meeting with Russo about the series, he told the latter that he wanted the series to sound like Pink Floyd's The Dark Side of the Moon, explaining "that album more than anything is really the soundscape of mental illness to some degree".[44][11] Russo felt that "the important part is allowing the humanity of these characters to really shine through", and in addition to an orchestra he used "a bunch of old synthesizers" and "a lot of interesting sound design" to represent the "otherworldly" elements of the series.[50] With the series' premiere, Russo reiterated that the "through-line" of the series is the relationship between Haller and Barrett, and said that a love story "lends itself to musical moments. It allows it to underscore the character." After his early meetings with Hawley, Russo developed some initial ideas for the score, and created three different themes to represent Haller. He adapted these ideas to fit the episodes once they had been edited.[51] A soundtrack album for the first season was released digitally on February 24, 2017, on Amazon.com.[52]

Shared universe connections

Landgraf stated, in January 2016, that the series would be set in a universe parallel to the X-Men films where "the US government is in the early days of being aware that something called mutants exist but the public is not". He felt it was unlikely that characters would cross over between the show and films, but noted that this could change between then and the premiere of the series.[34] That July, an article on Marvel.com referred to Legion as one of several characters joining the Marvel Cinematic Universe (MCU), suggesting that Legion would be set in that shared universe like Marvel Television's other series.[53] The next month, Singer said that Legion had actually been designed to fit into the X-Men universe, but also to stand alone, so "you wouldn't have to label" the relationship between the series and the films. He teased plans to have the series "relate to future X-Men movies".[54]

At New York Comic-Con 2016, Donner said that the series is "far from the X-Men movies, but still lives in that universe. The only way for X-Men to keep moving forward is to be original and to surprise. And this is a surprise. It is very, very different." Hawley explained that because the series is depicting the title character's "subjective reality", it would not have to address any connections to the films straight away, noting that Fargo, which is connected to the 1996 film of the same name, at first "had to stand on its own feet" before exploring those connections more; "We have to earn the right to be part of this universe. My hope is we create something so strong that the people in the movie studio call and say they would be foolish enough not to connect these things." He did state that "you can't tell this story without" acknowledging that Legion is the son of Charles Xavier, who appears in the films. In regards to the MCU, Loeb stated that his involvement in the series was a sign that "bridges are being made" between Marvel and Fox, "but I don't want to make any promises ... Marvel heroes at their core are people who are damaged and are trying to figure out who they are in life. It doesn't matter whether or not they're X-Men, Tony Stark, Matt Murdock or Peter Parker ... If you start at a place as strong as David's character is and you have a storyteller like Noah, then it's Marvel. In that way, it is all connected."[6]

Loeb and Donner stated in January 2017 that there were no plans to have Legion be the first in a series of connected shows on FX, like Marvel Television's group of interconnected Defenders series on Netflix,[55] and that Legion and the X-Men series being developed for Fox are "not going to get in each other's way."[10] Donner stated that the series was just a chance to bring an X-Men character to the screen who was not going to be used by the films. The producers hoped that audiences would watch the show because of its character-focus and the talents of Hawley and the cast, rather than to "see a Marvel franchise show."[55] Donner also noted that having Hawley focus on Haller's perspective of reality rather than connections to the X-Men films allowed the series to avoid the convoluted continuity of the films, "because we play with so many different timelines, and we rebooted and not really rebooted and all that" throughout the films. Therefore, "the cinematic universe will not worry about Legion. They will not worry about these TV worlds at all. They will just continue in the way that they have been continuing."[10] For the onscreen confirmation that Xavier is Haller's father in "Chapter 7", with Xavier's signature wheelchair shown in a brief flashback, the series' production was able to choose from any of the variant wheelchairs used throughout the film series. They settled on the version from X-Men: Apocalypse, with the prop used in that film being brought out of storage for the show.[13][23]

Release

Season Episodes Originally aired DVD and Blu-ray release dates
First aired Last aired Region 1 Region 2 Region 4
1 8 February 8, 2017 March 29, 2017 TBA TBA TBA
2 10[38] February 2018[38] TBA TBA TBA TBA

Broadcast

Legion airs on FX in the United States,[17] while Fox channels in over 125 countries have picked up their respective airing rights for the series, releasing the show using a "day-and-date" delivery system so that viewers around the world get the series on the same day as the U.S. Fox Networks Group's sales division handle distribution of the series to third parties.[56]

Reception

Season Nielsen ratings Critical response
Premiere total viewers
(in millions)
Finale total viewers
(in millions)
Season average total viewers,
inc. DVR (in millions)
Rank 18–49 rating (rank) Rotten Tomatoes Metacritic
1 1.62[24] 0.81[31] TBD TBD TBD 90% (60 reviews)[57] 82 (40 reviews)[58]
2 TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD TBD

Ratings

Writing for Screen Rant, J.M. Brandt noted that FX extensively advertised the series, but was debuting the 90 minute (with commercials) premiere at 10:00 pm on a Wednesday night, later than other genre "monster hits" like Game of Thrones and The Walking Dead. Brandt felt that the series' success would heavily depend on DVR viewing "to bolster what might be a likely smallish live audience".[59] Following the series premiere, Legion's debut ratings were described as "OK, not great", in line with other cable series debuts, but lower than other high-profile FX debuts such as American Crime Story and Hawley's own Fargo.[60]

Critical response

The review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes reported a 90% approval rating with an average rating of 8.36/10 based on 60 reviews. The website's critical consensus reads, "Bold, intelligent, and visually arresting, Legion is a masterfully surreal and brilliantly daring departure from traditional superhero conceits."[57] Metacritic, which uses a weighted average, assigned a score of 82 out of 100 based on 40 critics, indicating what the website considers to be "universal acclaim".[58]

Accolades

Year Award Category Recipient Result Ref.
2017 TVLine's Performer of the Week Performance in "Chapter 6" Aubrey Plaza Won [61]
Saturn Awards Best Superhero Adaptation Television Series Legion Pending [62]

References

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