’Vegas’ cashes in
03/14/2013 11:52
Dennis Quaid is the new sheriff in town in the new TV series set in 1960.
vegas Photo: Courtesy
There is an endless fascination with the quintessentially American city, Las
Vegas, a playground for adults in the desert, and there’s a new series about
it. Vegas will be premiering on YES Action on March 23 at 9 p.m. (and
will also be available on YES VOD).
Forget the over-the-top glitzy, late
1970s series, Vegas . The new Vegas was created by Greg Walker, who was an
executive producer on Without a Trace and a story editor of The X-Files , and
Nicholas Pileggi, the journalist who wrote the book Wiseguy , which was turned
into the Martin Scorsese film Goodfellas . He also wrote the book Casino, the
basis of another Scorsese film. Pileggi, who was married to late writer and
director Nora Ephron, is certainly a draw. His crime writing uncovered
sides of the mob that burst stereotypes about gangsters and stripped away the
romanticism of the immigrant crime boss made famous in The Godfather. Pileggi’s
gangsters were a new breed: angry, greedy, unencumbered by scruples about
selling drugs or anything else,and, above all, small-timers drawn to perks like
getting good tables in restaurants.
The mobsters in Vegas, which is set
in 1960, follow in the footsteps of the Goodfellas and Casino gangsters, but
there is a true hero in this series, and it’s the newly appointed sheriff, Ralph
Lamb, played by Dennis Quaid. Once again, television turns out to be a good
alternative for movie actors who, for whatever reason, have not reached Tom
Cruise-like star status. Quaid is the best he’s been in years in the role of the
incorruptible Lamb, a cattle rancher in the desert just outside the city. When
the series opens, he is herding cattle with his brother, Jack (Irish actor Jason
O’Mara, who starred on the sci-fi series Terra Nova), and his son, Dixon
(Taylor Handley). Suddenly, a low-flying plane scatters the herd. The plane is
bringing Chicago crime boss Vincent Savino (Michael Chiklis, best known for The
Commish and The Shield) to Vegas to run and expand a casino. Outraged, Lamb
storms in and confronts the head of the airstrip, who had promised him that he
would not let planes fly over the ranch. Savino takes note of Lamb’s toughness,
and the main conflict is set up: rural cowboys vs. urban criminals –- the older,
more traditional America confronting a new, harsher and more money-driven
society.
It’s a good set-up, but the series soon takes a more predictable
turn. A body turns up the desert, of a young woman who turns out to be the
governor’s niece and accountant at one of the casinos. Las Vegas Mayor
Ted Bennett (Michael O’Neill, one of the hardest-working and best character
actors around), who knew Lamb as a tireless MP in World War II, begs him to
investigate this murder, then appoints him sheriff. Lamb resists, for about five
minutes, but soon has settled into his new post. The series then becomes a solid
police procedural, as Lamb roots out the killer from among several unsavory
candidates, most of them connected somehow to the casino. He’s helped by
Carrie-Anne Moss (The Matrix) as Katherine, an assistant district attorney who
is the daughter of a rival rancher. A will-they/won’t-they romance between Lamb
and Catherine is set into motion from the first episode, and it isn’t
particularly subtle.
Storylines continue from episode to episode, but the
crimes we’ve seen before. It’s the characters that are more interesting. The
series plays with our knowledge of how huge Las Vegas eventually
became. We know what’s coming, while Ralph Lamb doesn’t. His fight
against the mobster and his henchmen is all the more poignant because we know,
at some point, Lamb has to lose.
How much you enjoy the show will depend
on your response to Dennis Quaid’s low-key presence in the lead role. Having an
iconic cowboy storming the neon jungle of Vegas, a Stetson on his head, makes
the series fun. If you connect with Ralph Lamb, you may get addicted to this
series. But remember, it’s from CBS, and while network television
sometimes flirts with breaking ground, usually their series retreat quickly to
familiar territory.