Chaos all around you. Confusion everywhere you look. Pandemonium at the laundromat. Bedlam at the bar. Panic at the disco. All around the world, something is spreading quickly from person to person, causing them to violently seize up and then attack everyone around them. There is nowhere to run. Nowhere to hide. They will find you. And there’s no way to stop them. Welcome to Apple TV’s new series Pluribus, by Vince Gilligan. What starts in a lab and gets out spreads violently across America and the world, causing millions upon millions of death. And the ones who survive, well, they don’t come back the same. Only a handful of people are immune.
I know this sounds like the plot to the next tired The Walking Dead spin-off, but it’s not. While there are a lot of similarities to the common opening gambit of zombie apocalypse films, and the pilot episode will evoke those feelings of sudden, cataclysmic dread and confusion, Gilligan takes his show in a completely different direction. After Breaking Bad and Better Call Saul showed us the depths of depravity and organized crime in Albuquerque, we’re going all the way back to Albuquerque again (hopefully this isn’t becoming his coastal Maine) with this unique end of the world show. Pluribus also marks Gilligan’s return to his other roots, science fiction; he wrote 30 episodes and produced 127 of The X-Files. So this isn’t a wild turn for him, he’s as pedigreed as they come. He’s also an acclaimed VHS game actor.
I should say that at the time of writing this, only two episodes have aired so far, so this is going to be closer to a Lone Wolf and Stub installment than a full series analysis, I just don’t have a punny name for watching a TV show on my sofa that came out recently. So I will be avoiding as many spoilers as possible, because if you don’t know the premise already, this show is a wild ride from jump. For me, all I needed to hear was Rhea Seehorn and Vince Gilligan and I was in; I shut off the trailer midway through and went back to watching old episodes of Taskmaster. And if Pluribus turns out to be as good as I think it’s going to be based on the promise that it shows in these first two episodes, it will most definitely warrant a follow-up once the season wraps. Because I was that engrossed by the story we’ve seen so far and I cannot wait to see more.
Now it’s time to meet Carol Sturka, played by Better Call Saul alum Rhea Seehorn, an author in the middle of a reading and book signing at Barnes and Noble (glad to see that these things still exist). Her audience is absolutely captivated and is almost entirely comprised of middle aged white women. She writes that kind of romantasy novel that you see in airports and train stations; the ones that leave the author wealthy, but unfulfilled. At least that’s the case for Carol, as she even refers to her work as mindless crap. It also appears that because the key demographic of her novels is a particular kind of person, she seems to hide her sexuality; her manager Helen is also her romantic partner (I’ve seen some outlets refer to her as Carol’s wife, but that doesn’t make much sense if she’s hiding that information publicly and not using a pen name). Seehorn continues to be the most underrated actress working in television today. She deserved every Emmy for playing Kim Wexler and was completely snubbed. And I mean every Emmy. Lead Actress in a Drama Series, Supporting Actress in a Comedy Series, Outstanding Reality Competition Program, I don’t care; if it’s an Emmy, she deserved it. It doesn’t take long for her to show off those incredible acting skills either, with the pilot giving her very strong material to work with and showcase her range as an actress; levying both comedic timing and dramatic skill to portray a very real feeling person in an extraordinary situation. A situation in which she carries the extreme weight of responsibility, struggles with grief and isolation, and has to figure out how to survive in a world where she is nearly a singular phenomenon.
This is one of the most striking shows of the year. Vince Gillian’s visual style is plastered all over this show; the shot framing, the angles, the shot composition, and I’m sure as the series continues, I’ll develop a better understanding of the color theory here. Because it’s Vince Gilligan and there’s always a color theory in his work, but without knowing where the season goes, it’s hard to comment on it. But it’s something you feel instinctually as you watch the show. Every color is there for a reason, I’m sure of it. I’m also picking up on some religious imagery, but I’m not well-versed enough in Catholicism to pick up on all of it (Gilligan was raised Catholic), but the number 12 does come up a few times and I know what that means. Even the name itself is charged with social commentary. Pluribus, Latin for “of many”, adorns the back of every piece of American currency, which, in the real world is the endless pursuit of a few and the grudging necessity of most, but in Pluribus, it is suddenly utterly meaningless. There are also a lot of interesting things being said here already; this show mirrors our world. Without going into too much detail, I will say that is very much in conversation with the post-pandemic society we have now. Gilligan touches on ego fragility, echo chambers, digital isolation, and themes of happiness, misery, and generative AI as well.
There are other concepts that I don’t even want to bring up because you should go into Pluribus as fresh as possible. It’s a great thing, not having expectations for a piece of media and an even better thing when that media keeps surprising you at every turn. Which is what Pluribus does; every time I think it’s going in one direction, it goes in another. And not the complete opposite, often it’s an outcome I never even considered. So refreshing. And it asks a lot of questions about what our society is now and what it could become. And more than that, more than anything else that really struck me about Pluribus’s commentary on today’s society, is the biggest question so far. What are you supposed to do if the world is ending and the few people still remaining in it are fine with that? Carol so desperately wants to save humanity—she doesn’t know how, she doesn’t know what to do, she doesn’t know anything—but she’s finding that help is hard to find because people are simply unwilling to even entertain that they should be doing anything. Because who really cares if it’s an apocalypse as long as it’s a comfortable one?
The show is absolutely captivating. Each episode so far has been about an hour long and it was the first two hour block in recent memory that I didn’t even think about picking up my phone. I couldn’t look away. Even through the 12 minute wordless sequence at the beginning of the second episode, I was glued to the screen in a way I haven’t been in a long time. And as the events unfolded, I found myself being drawn deeper and deeper into the show. It could well be Apple TV’s next big hit, along the lines of Severance, Slow Horses, Ted Lasso, and Shrinking, (although Apple also gave us Fountain of Youth) and with Vince Gilligan at the helm, I have a pretty high degree of confidence that he will stick the landing. Now, it’s no secret that I found Breaking Bad to be overrated, but I thought Better Call Saul was one of the most brilliant pieces of television I’ve ever seen, from start to finish. So many times when someone asks me about a show, I say things like “Oh yeah, those first few seasons were great” or “It had a lot of promise”, but Better Call Saul is one I can wholeheartedly say was fantastic from start to finish. Even Breaking Bad, which, again, I did not like, had one of the best series wrap-ups out there; it was the kind of series finale JJ Abrams could never even dream of. So I am pretty hopeful that Pluribus will continue to be as strong as it started. Pluribus is streaming exclusively on Apple TV, releasing weekly on Fridays.